# Unequal Progress in Early-Onset Bladder Cancer Control: Global Trends, Socioeconomic Disparities, and Policy Efficiency from 1990 to 2021

**Authors:** Zhuofan Nan, Weiguang Zhao, Shengzhou Li, Chaoyan Yue, Xiangqian Cao, Chenkai Yang, Yilin Yan, Fenyong Sun, Bing Shen

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/healthcare14020193 · 2026-01-12

## TL;DR

This study shows that early-onset bladder cancer is increasing globally, especially in middle-income countries, with significant disparities and the need for better prevention and resource allocation.

## Contribution

The study introduces decomposition and SDI-efficiency frontier analyses to assess EOBC trends and policy performance.

## Key findings

- EOBC incidence, prevalence, and DALYs increased significantly from 1990 to 2021, with the highest burden in middle-SDI regions.
- Males had over twice the burden of females, with the highest rates in the 45–49 age group.
- Smoking was the leading risk factor, while hyperglycemia burdens rose in high-income areas.

## Abstract

Background: This study investigates the global burden of early-onset bladder cancer (EOBC) from 1990 to 2021, highlighting regional disparities and the growing role of metabolic risk factors. Early-onset bladder cancer (EOBC), diagnosed before age 50, is an emerging global health concern. While less common than kidney cancer, EOBC contributes substantially to mortality and disability-adjusted life years (DALYs), with marked sex disparities. Its global epidemiology remains unassessed systematically. Methods: Using GBD 1990–2021 data, we analyzed EOBC incidence, prevalence, mortality, and DALYs across 204 countries in individuals aged 15–49. Trends were examined via segmented regression, EAPC, and Bayesian age-period-cohort modeling. Inequality was quantified using SII and CI. Decomposition and SDI-efficiency frontier analyses were introduced. Results: From 1990 to 2021, EOBC incidence rose 62.2%, prevalence 73.1%, deaths 15.3%, and DALYs 15.8%. Middle-SDI regions bore the highest burden. Aging drove trends in high-SDI areas and population growth in low-SDI regions. Over 25% of high-SDI countries underperformed in incidence/prevalence control. Smoking remained the leading risk factor, with rising hyperglycemia burdens in high-income areas. Males carried over twice the female burden, peaking at age 45–49. Conclusions: EOBC shows sustained global growth with middle-aged concentration and significant regional disparities. Structural inefficiencies highlight the need for enhanced screening, early warning, and tailored resource allocation.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** bladder cancer (MONDO:0004986), hyperglycemia (MONDO:0002909)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Bladder Cancer (MESH:D001749), kidney cancer (MESH:D007680), hyperglycemia (MESH:D006943), deaths (MESH:D003643)

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12840968/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12840968