Shifting burden of nasopharyngeal carcinoma: global patterns and forecasts to 2050 from the GBD 2021
Enhui Zhou, Feifei Xu, Tianjiao Zhou, Jingyu Zhang, Fan Song, Jianxiang Li, Hongliang Yi, Qingliang Wang, Weijun Huang

TL;DR
This study examines global trends in nasopharyngeal carcinoma from 1990 to 2021 and predicts future patterns through 2050.
Contribution
The paper provides new global projections of nasopharyngeal carcinoma incidence and burden up to 2050 using the GBD 2021 data.
Findings
Global mortality and disability from NPC have decreased, but incidence is rising in certain populations.
Projections show a continued decline in death rates but an increase in incidence rates among males in high-risk regions.
East Asia and high-middle SDI regions are expected to see rising nasopharyngeal carcinoma incidence.
Abstract
Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) exhibits pronounced geographical variation, with a high burden in specific regions. We assessed global, regional, and national trends in NPC burden from 1990 to 2021 and projected estimates to 2050. We analyzed data from the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) 2021 study for 204 countries and territories across 21 regions. Age-standardized incidence rate (ASIR), age-standardized death rate (ASDR), and age-standardized disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) rate were estimated, and temporal trends were assessed using estimated annual percentage change (EAPC) by socio-demographic index (SDI), sex, and age group. Future burden from 2022 to 2050 was projected using a Bayesian age–period–cohort model. In 2021, there were 118,878 incident cases, 75,359 deaths, and 2,490,191 DALYs due to NPC globally. The global ASIR was 1.38 per 100,000 population (EAPC −1.06), the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHead and Neck Cancer Studies · SARS-CoV-2 detection and testing · Cervical Cancer and HPV Research
