Role of Smoking in Global and Regional Cardiovascular Mortality
Top Cited Papers
- 26 July 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation
- Vol. 112 (4) , 489-497
- https://doi.org/10.1161/circulationaha.104.521708
Abstract
Background— Smoking is a major cause of cardiovascular disease mortality. There is little information on how it contributes to global and regional cause-specific mortality from cardiovascular diseases for which background risk varies because of other risks. Method and Results— We used data from the American Cancer Society’s Cancer Prevention Study II (CPS II) and the World Health Organization Global Burden of Disease mortality database to estimate smoking-attributable deaths from ischemic heart disease, cerebrovascular disease, and a cluster of other cardiovascular diseases for 14 epidemiological subregions of the world by age and sex. We used lung cancer mortality as an indirect marker for accumulated smoking hazard. CPS-II hazards were adjusted for important covariates. In the year 2000, an estimated 1.62 (95% CI, 1.27 to 2.04) million cardiovascular deaths in the world, 11% of total global cardiovascular deaths, were due to smoking. Of these, 1.17 million deaths were among men and 450 000 among women. ...Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Trends in the Prescribing of Thiazides for HypertensionPLoS Medicine, 2005
- How can cross-country research on health risks strengthen interventions? Lessons from INTERHEARTThe Lancet, 2004
- Effect of potentially modifiable risk factors associated with myocardial infarction in 52 countries (the INTERHEART study): case-control studyThe Lancet, 2004
- Estimates of global mortality attributable to smoking in 2000The Lancet, 2003
- Smoking and mortality from tuberculosis and other diseases in India: retrospective study of 43 000 adult male deaths and 35 000 controlsThe Lancet, 2003
- Measuring the accumulated hazards of smoking: global and regional estimates for 2000Tobacco Control, 2003
- Selected major risk factors and global and regional burden of diseasePublished by Elsevier ,2002
- Part II. What is unique about the experience in lower-and middle-income less-industrialised countries compared with the very-highincome industrialised countries?Public Health Nutrition, 2002
- State monitoring activities related to Pfiesteria-like organisms.Environmental Health Perspectives, 2001
- Mortality from tobacco in developed countries: indirect estimation from national vital statisticsThe Lancet, 1992