1990-2021 年 204 个国家和地区妊娠 20 周或更长时间的全球、地区和国家死产情况: 2021 年全球疾病负担研究的结果

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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景死胎是一种灾难性的不良妊娠结局,往往是可以避免的。要想在减少妊娠损失方面继续取得进展,就必须全面监测死产水平和趋势,不放过任何一个死产案例。这项分析是《2021 年全球疾病、伤害和风险因素负担研究》(GBD)的一部分,它有条不紊地考虑了不同的死胎定义,目的是全面估算 204 个国家和地区 1990 年至 2021 年期间 20 周或 20 周以上的所有死胎情况。方法我们从 204 个国家和地区中 185 个国家和地区的 11 412 个来源中提取了死胎数据,其中包括 234 项调查、231 项已发表的研究、1633 份生命统计报告以及生命登记系统中 10 585 个独特的地点-年份组合。我们的最终数据集包含 11 种不同的定义,并根据两个胎龄阈值进行了调整:20 周或更长(参考)和 28 周或更长(用于比较)。我们利用时空高斯过程回归对每个地点和年份的死胎率与新生儿死亡率的比率进行建模,然后利用 GBD 2021 对生育率和全因新生儿死亡率的最终评估来计算死胎总数。二次分析评估了采用更严格的胎龄定义所遗漏的死胎数量、死胎趋势与社会人口指数的函数关系,以及相对于新生儿死亡而言在降低死胎率方面所取得的进展。研究结果2021年,全球妊娠20周或更长时间的死胎率为每千名新生儿23-0(95%不确定区间[UI]19-7-27-2),而妊娠28周或更长时间的死胎率为每千名新生儿16-1(13-9-19-0)。2021 年全球新生儿死亡率为每 1000 例活产 17-1 (14-8-19-9),相当于新生儿死亡人数为 2-1900 万 (1-90-2-55)。据估计,妊娠 20 周或更长时间的死产数量从 1990 年的 508 万(95% UI 4-07-6-35)下降到 2021 年的 304 万(2-61-3-62),相当于减少了 39%-8%(31-8-48-0),落后于同期全球新生儿死亡率 45%-6%(36-3-53-1)的改善(1990 年新生儿死亡率为 403 万[3-86-4-22])。南亚和撒哈拉以南非洲地区的死产占全球总数的 77-4%(304 万中的 2500 万),比 1990 年的 60-3%(508 万中的 307 万)有所增加。2021 年,0-9.26 亿(0-7.92-1-10)个死胎发生在妊娠 20 周至 28 周之间,占全球总数(30-04 万)的 30-5%,在国家层面存在很大差异。统计所有死产对取得进展至关重要,因为有近三分之一的死产(总数接近 100 万)在 28 周或更长的临界值时仍未统计。我们的调查结果表明,在减少死产方面取得的进展不尽相同,高负担主要集中在发展水平较低的国家。数据稀缺和数据质量差限制了我们对许多地方的死胎进行精确统计的能力。为减轻全球死胎负担,亟需解决孕产妇保健普及率不平等问题、加强孕产妇保健质量、提高数据系统的稳健性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Global, regional, and national stillbirths at 20 weeks' gestation or longer in 204 countries and territories, 1990–2021: findings from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2021

Background

Stillbirth is a devastating and often avoidable adverse pregnancy outcome. Monitoring stillbirth levels and trends—in a comprehensive manner that leaves no one uncounted—is imperative for continuing progress in pregnancy loss reduction. This analysis, completed as part of the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) 2021, methodically accounted for different stillbirth definitions with the aim of comprehensively estimating all stillbirths at 20 weeks or longer for 204 countries and territories from 1990 to 2021.

Methods

We extracted data on stillbirths from 11 412 sources across 185 of 204 countries and territories, including 234 surveys, 231 published studies, 1633 vital statistics reports, and 10 585 unique location-year combinations from vital registration systems. Our final dataset comprised 11 different definitions, which were adjusted to match two gestational age thresholds: 20 weeks or longer (reference) and 28 weeks or longer (for comparisons). We modelled the ratio of stillbirth rate to neonatal mortality rate with spatiotemporal Gaussian process regression for each location and year, and then used final GBD 2021 assessments of fertility and all-cause neonatal mortality to calculate total stillbirths. Secondary analyses evaluated the number of stillbirths missed with the more restrictive gestational age definition, trends in stillbirths as a function of Socio-demographic Index, and progress in reducing stillbirths relative to neonatal deaths.

Findings

In 2021, the global stillbirth rate was 23·0 (95% uncertainty interval [UI] 19·7–27·2) per 1000 births (stillbirths plus livebirths) at 20 weeks' gestation or longer, compared to 16·1 (13·9–19·0) per 1000 births at 28 weeks' gestation or longer. The global neonatal mortality rate in 2021 was 17·1 (14·8–19·9) per 1000 livebirths, corresponding to 2·19 million (1·90–2·55) neonatal deaths. The estimated number of stillbirths occurring at 20 weeks' gestation or longer decreased from 5·08 million (95% UI 4·07–6·35) in 1990 to 3·04 million (2·61–3·62) in 2021, corresponding to a 39·8% (31·8–48·0) reduction, which lagged behind a global improvement in neonatal deaths of 45·6% (36·3–53·1) for the same period (down from 4·03 million [3·86–4·22] neonatal deaths in 1990). Stillbirths in south Asia and sub-Saharan Africa comprised 77·4% (2·35 million of 3·04 million) of the global total, an increase from 60·3% (3·07 million of 5·08 million) in 1990. In 2021, 0·926 million (0·792–1·10) stillbirths, corresponding to 30·5% of the global total (3·04 million), occurred between 20 weeks' gestation and 28 weeks' gestation, with substantial variation at the country level.

Interpretation

Despite the gradual global decline in stillbirths between 1990 and 2021, the overall number of stillbirths remains substantially high. Counting all stillbirths is paramount to progress, as nearly a third—close to 1 million in total—are left uncounted at the 28 weeks or longer threshold. Our findings draw attention to the differential progress in reducing stillbirths, with a high burden concentrated in countries with low development status. Scarce data availability and poor data quality constrain our capacity to precisely account for stillbirths in many locations. Addressing inequities in universal maternal health coverage, strengthening the quality of maternal health care, and improving the robustness of data systems are urgently needed to reduce the global burden of stillbirths.

Funding

Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
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