<p>Epidemic Trends of Tuberculosis in China from 1990 to 2017: Evidence from the Global Burden of Disease Study</p>
Cheng Ding, Shuting Wang, Yanwan Shangguan, Xuewen Feng, Wanru Guo, Pei‐Yong Shi, Zhongkang Ji, Kaijin Xu
Infection and Drug Resistance · 2020-06
Abstract
PURPOSE: Tuberculosis remains a major public health problem globally, especially in undeveloped countries. This study aimed to evaluate and review the long-term epidemic trends of tuberculosis in China. METHODS: Data were extracted from the Global Health Data Exchange. Metrics (prevalence, incidence and mortality) and Joinpoint regression were used to identify the epidemic trends. RESULTS: From 1990 to 2017, decreasing trends in prevalence (average annual percent change, AAPC: -0.5%, 95% CI: -0.6% to -0.5%), incidence (-3.2%, 95% CI: -3.5% to -2.9%), and mortality (-5.7%, 95% CI: -6.2% to -5.3%) of tuberculosis were observed. The incidence and mortality of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) decreased with AAPC of -2.3% (-3.1% to -1.4%) and -4.9% (-5.4% to -4.5%), respectively, while the prevalence increased with an AAPC of 1.2% (0.3% to 2.0%). The burden of extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB) increased with an AAPC of 12.5% (11.9% to 13.2%) in prevalence, 7.6% (6.5% to 8.7%) in incidence, and 4.5% (3.6% to 5.4%) in mortality. The disease burden of tuberculosis increased with age and peaked among those aged over 70. CONCLUSION: The epidemic of tuberculosis decreased in China, while the disease burden was still challenging to control. MDR-TB and XDR-TB should be emphasized along with the epidemic. It will certainly be a difficult task to achieve the post-2015 global targets by 2025 and 2035.
MeSH terms
- Tuberculosis
- Medicine
- Incidence (geometry)
- Public health
- Disease
- Disease burden
- Burden of disease
- China
- Extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis
- Demography
- Environmental health
- Global health
- Mortality rate