Incidence and mortality trends of people living with dementia among 7 million individuals over 10 years in Italy: A retrospective cohort study using administrative linked data

IF 3.3 3区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Lorenzo Blandi , Paola Bertuccio , Timo Clemens , Helmut Brand , Anna Odone
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Abstract

Purpose

We aimed to estimate trends of dementia incidence and to compute and compare all-cause mortality among people living with and without dementia, in a whole regional population, from 2013 to 2023.

Methods

Our retrospective population-wide cohort study included 7,030,374 people aged 50 years and older from regional administrative data, living in Lombardy, the most populous Italian region. We computed annual age-standardised dementia incidence estimated rates and age-standardised all-cause mortality estimated rates among people living with and without dementia, both overall and stratified by age and sex.

Results

Over the last decade, age-standardised dementia incidence estimated rates have decreased by 52.8 % for women and 53.1 % for males. In contrast, age-standardised all-cause mortality estimated rates among people living with dementia grew by 14.0 % for women and 21.8 % for males. Conversely, during the pandemic, there was a higher excess in mortality estimated rates in the female population living with dementia compared to the male, up to 60 % in older groups aged 80 or older. In the male population without dementia compared to the female, the higher excess was up to 50 % in age groups of 70–74 and 75–79.

Conclusions

Our study reported a reduction in dementia incidence and increase in all-cause mortality of people living with dementia over the last decade, indicating that dementia prevalence is declining. Moreover, previously under-investigated gender disparities in mortality estimated rates emerged across different age groups during the pandemic.
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来源期刊
Annals of Epidemiology
Annals of Epidemiology 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
7.40
自引率
1.80%
发文量
207
审稿时长
59 days
期刊介绍: The journal emphasizes the application of epidemiologic methods to issues that affect the distribution and determinants of human illness in diverse contexts. Its primary focus is on chronic and acute conditions of diverse etiologies and of major importance to clinical medicine, public health, and health care delivery.
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