Incidence and prevalence of moyamoya disease in urban China: a nationwide retrospective cohort study

Author:

Sun YixinORCID,Zhou Guoyu,Feng Jingnan,Chen Lu,Liu Guozhen,Wang Jinxi,Wang Qingliang,Yu Junyou,Yang Xiwang,Yang Zheng,Gao Pei,Wang Shengfeng,Zhan Siyan

Abstract

Background and objectiveMoyamoya disease (MMD) is an increasingly recognised cause of stroke, mainly described in East Asia. China is the largest nation in Asia, but few studies reported the epidemiology of MMD, especially at a national level. We aimed to estimate the incidence and prevalence of MMD in China.MethodsWe performed a population-based study using data from the national databases of Urban Basic Medical Insurance between 2013 and 2016, covering approximately 0.50 billion individuals. MMD cases were identified by diagnostic code (International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision I67.5) or related diagnostic text.ResultsA total of 1987 MMD patients (mean age 44.45±14.30 years, female-to-male ratio 1.12) were identified, representing a national crude incidence of 0.59 (95% CI: 0.49 to 0.68) and a prevalence of 1.01 (95% CI: 0.81 to 1.21) per 100 000 person-years in 2016. Rates were higher in females than in males for the incidence (0.66 vs 0.52) and prevalence (1.05 vs 0.90). And the age-specific rates showed a bimodal distribution, with the highest peak in middle-aged group and the second peak in child group.ConclusionsOur results confirm that MMD is relatively common in East Asians, but the rates in China were lower than those in other East Asian countries such as Japan and Korea. The unique epidemiological features, including a relatively weak female predominance and a shift in the highest peak of incidence from children to adults, revealed new sight into MMD. Further research is expected to explore the potential pathogenesis of MMD.

Funder

Peking University Medicine Seed Fund for Interdisciplinary Research: The Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical)

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