Global, regional, and national temporal trends in mortality and disease burden of nasopharyngeal carcinoma attributable to smoking from 1990 to 2021 and predictions to 2040
Defeng Liu, Lulu Zhuang, Yueze Li, Jinming Yu, Minghuan Li

TL;DR
This study examines how smoking contributes to the global burden of nasopharyngeal carcinoma, finding significant regional and gender differences in mortality and disease burden from 1990 to 2021.
Contribution
The study provides new global and regional trends in the disease burden of smoking-attributable nasopharyngeal carcinoma and future projections.
Findings
In 2021, smoking-attributable NPC caused over 1.3 million years of life lost globally, with the highest burden in Asia.
Males and middle-aged populations experienced a higher disease burden, though age-standardized rates declined for females and in diverse SDI regions.
Projections suggest rising total deaths and burden, but declining age-standardized rates except for years lived with disability.
Abstract
Smoking is a major environmental risk factor for nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC), but the global burden and epidemiological trends of NPC attributable to smoking remain unclear. Data were obtained from the 2021 Global Burden of Disease study. A comprehensive analysis was conducted on mortality, years lived with disability (YLDs), years of life lost (YLLs), disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) attributable to NPC attributable to smoking. Clustering analysis was applied to evaluate the variation patterns across 21 regions. The NORDPRED age-period-cohort model was used for prediction. In 2021, there were 13410 deaths globally from NPC attributable to smoking, 10031 YLDs, 1379583 YLLs, and 389614 DALYs. The disease burden was most severe in Asia. Males bore a significantly higher burden than females, mainly concentrated in middle-aged and older populations. From 1990 to 2021, although…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSmoking Behavior and Cessation · Global Cancer Incidence and Screening · Head and Neck Cancer Studies
