Centre for Heart Rhythm Disorders, University of Adelaide and Royal Adelaide Hospital, Adelaide, Australia.
Department of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University of Yaoundé 1, Yaoundé, Cameroon; Health Information Management and Risk Assessment Unit, World Health Emergencies Programme, Democratic Republic of the Congo World Health Organization Country Office, WHO Region for Africa, Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Lancet Child Adolesc Health. 2022 Mar;6(3):158-170. doi: 10.1016/S2352-4642(21)00374-6. Epub 2022 Jan 17.
Halting the rise in cardiometabolic risk factors in children and adolescents is crucial to curb the global burden of cardiovascular diseases. We aim to provide global, regional, and national estimates of the prevalence of metabolic syndrome in children and adolescents to support the development of evidence-based prevention strategies.
In this systematic review with modelling analysis, we searched PubMed, Embase, Africa Journal Online, and Global Index Medicus from database inception to Jan 30, 2021, with no restriction on language or geographical location. We included community-based and school-based cross-sectional studies and cross-sectional analysis of cohort studies that reported prevalence of metabolic syndrome in the general population of children (6-12 years) and adolescents (13-18 years). Only studies with a low risk of bias were considered. Eligible studies included at least 200 participants and used probabilistic-based sampling. Diagnosis of metabolic syndrome had to meet at least three of the following criteria: high systolic or diastolic blood pressure (≥90th percentile for age, sex, and height); waist circumference in at least the 90th percentile for age, sex, and ethnic group; fasting plasma glucose 5·6 mmol/L or greater; fasting plasma triglycerides 1·24 mmol/L or greater; and fasting plasma high density lipoprotein cholesterol 1·03 mmol/L or less. Independent investigators selected eligible studies and extracted relevant data. The primary outcome was a crude estimate of metabolic syndrome prevalence, assessed using a Bayesian hierarchical model.
Our search yielded 6808 items, of which 169 studies were eligible for analysis, including 306 prevalence datapoints, with 550 405 children and adolescents from 44 countries in 13 regions. The between-study variance (τ) was 0·52 (95% CI 0·42-0·67), which could reflect the measurement of each component of the metabolic syndrome and covariates as sources of between-study heterogeneity. We estimated the global prevalence of metabolic syndrome in 2020 at 2·8% (95% uncertainty interval [UI] 1·4-6·7) for children and 4·8% (2·9-8·5) for adolescents, equating to around 25·8 (12·6-61·0) million children and 35·5 (21·3-63·0) million adolescents living with metabolic syndrome. In children, the prevalence of metabolic syndrome was 2·2% (95% UI 1·4-3·6) in high-income countries, 3·1% (2·5-4·3) in upper-middle-income countries, 2·6% (0·9-8·3) in lower-middle-income countries, and 3·5% (1·0-8·0) in low-income countries. In adolescents, the prevalence of metabolic syndrome was 5·5% (4·1-8·4) in high-income countries, 3·9% (3·1-5·4) in upper-middle-income countries, 4·5% (2·6-8·4) in lower-middle-income countries, and 7·0% (2·4-15·7) in low-income countries. Prevalence in children varied from 1·4% (0·6-3·1) in northwestern Europe to 8·2% (6·9-10·1) in Central Latin America. Prevalence for adolescents ranged from 2·9% (95% UI 2·6-3·3) in east Asia to 6·7% (5·9-8·3) in high-income English-speaking countries. The three countries with the highest prevalence estimates in children were Nicaragua (5·2%, 2·8-10·4), Iran (8·8%, 8·0-9·6), and Mexico (12·3%, 11·0-13·7); and the three countries with the highest prevalence estimates in adolescents were Iran (9·0%, 8·4-9·7), United Arab Emirates (9·8%, 8·5-10·3), and Spain (9·9%, 9·1-10·8).
In 2020, about 3% of children and 5% of adolescents had metabolic syndrome, with some variation across countries and regions. The prevalence of metabolic syndrome was not consistently higher with increasing level of development, suggesting that the problem is not mainly driven by country wealth. The high number of children and adolescents living with metabolic syndrome globally highlights the urgent need for multisectoral interventions to reduce the global burden of metabolic syndrome and the conditions that lead to it, including childhood overweight and obesity.
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遏制儿童和青少年心血管代谢危险因素的上升对于遏制全球心血管疾病负担至关重要。我们旨在提供儿童和青少年代谢综合征流行率的全球、区域和国家估计值,以支持制定基于证据的预防策略。
在这项系统评价和建模分析中,我们检索了 PubMed、Embase、Africa Journal Online 和 Global Index Medicus,检索时间从数据库建立到 2021 年 1 月 30 日,语言和地理位置没有限制。我们纳入了基于社区和学校的横断面研究以及对一般人群(6-12 岁)和青少年(13-18 岁)的队列研究进行的横断面分析。只有低偏倚风险的研究才被考虑。符合条件的研究包括至少 200 名参与者,并使用基于概率的抽样方法。代谢综合征的诊断必须符合以下至少三项标准:收缩压或舒张压高(年龄、性别和身高的第 90 百分位以上);腰围至少在第 90 百分位(年龄、性别和种族群体)以上;空腹血糖 5·6mmol/L 或更高;空腹血浆甘油三酯 1·24mmol/L 或更高;空腹血浆高密度脂蛋白胆固醇 1·03mmol/L 或更低。独立调查人员选择符合条件的研究并提取相关数据。主要结局是代谢综合征流行率的粗略估计值,使用贝叶斯层次模型进行评估。
我们的搜索结果为 6808 项,其中 169 项研究符合分析条件,包括 306 个流行率数据点,涉及来自 13 个地区的 44 个国家的 550405 名儿童和青少年。研究间方差(τ)为 0·52(95%CI 0·42-0·67),这可能反映了代谢综合征每个组成部分的测量和协变量作为研究间异质性的来源。我们估计 2020 年全球儿童代谢综合征的流行率为 2·8%(95%不确定区间[UI] 1·4-6·7),青少年为 4·8%(2·9-8·5),相当于约 2580 万(1260 万-6100 万)儿童和 3550 万(2130 万-6300 万)青少年患有代谢综合征。在儿童中,高收入国家代谢综合征的流行率为 2·2%(95% UI 1·4-3·6),中上收入国家为 3·1%(2·5-4·3),中下收入国家为 2·6%(0·9-8·3),低收入国家为 3·5%(1·0-8·0)。在青少年中,高收入国家代谢综合征的流行率为 5·5%(4·1-8·4),中上收入国家为 3·9%(3·1-5·4),中下收入国家为 4·5%(2·6-8·4),低收入国家为 7·0%(2·4-15·7)。儿童的流行率从西北欧的 1·4%(0·6-3·1)到中美洲的 8·2%(6·9-10·1)不等。青少年的流行率范围从东亚的 2·9%(95% UI 2·6-3·3)到高收入英语国家的 6·7%(5·9-8·3)。儿童中流行率估计值最高的三个国家是尼加拉瓜(5·2%,2·8-10·4)、伊朗(8·8%,8·0-9·6)和墨西哥(12·3%,11·0-13·7);青少年中流行率估计值最高的三个国家是伊朗(9·0%,8·4-9·7)、阿拉伯联合酋长国(9·8%,8·5-10·3)和西班牙(9·9%,9·1-10·8)。
2020 年,约有 3%的儿童和 5%的青少年患有代谢综合征,各国和各地区存在一定差异。代谢综合征的流行率并没有随着发展水平的提高而持续上升,这表明该问题主要不是由国家财富驱动的。全球有如此多的儿童和青少年患有代谢综合征,这突出表明需要采取多部门干预措施,以减轻全球代谢综合征负担以及导致其发生的各种情况,包括儿童超重和肥胖。
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