Global, regional and national burden of neurodegenerative diseases attributable to smoking: A descriptive study based on the Global Burden of Disease Study 2021
Zeyu Yang, Zhaoyi Jing, Qingyu Song, Xiao Ding, Xiaohui Lu

TL;DR
This study examines how smoking contributes to dementia and multiple sclerosis worldwide, showing rising global health impacts and gender disparities.
Contribution
The study provides a global analysis of smoking-attributable neurodegenerative disease burden using GBD 2021 data across regions and demographics.
Findings
Smoking-attributable deaths and disability from dementia and multiple sclerosis have increased globally.
Males consistently outnumber females in smoking-related neurodegenerative disease burden across all age groups.
Lebanon and Denmark show the highest burden for dementia and multiple sclerosis, respectively.
Abstract
Neurodegenerative diseases impose a significant healthcare burden worldwide. Within the context of smoking, the risk of dementia and multiple sclerosis significantly increases. However, the global epidemiological characteristics of smoking-induced neurodegenerative diseases remain unclear. This study, based on data from the GBD 2021 database, quantified the burden of smoking-attributable neurodegenerative diseases globally, across 5 SDI regions, 21 regions, and 204 countries and territories. The analysis was stratified by age and sex and covered the period from 1990 to 2021, utilizing a descriptive study design. The analysis incorporates transnational inequality assessment, decomposition techniques, and frontier analysis. Projections of the neurodegenerative diseases attributable to smoking burden for 2035 are also presented. From a global perspective, smoking-attributable deaths and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSmoking Behavior and Cessation · Health, Environment, Cognitive Aging · Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptors Study
