FROM:
European Spine Journal 2018 (Sep); 27 (Suppl 6): 796–801 ~ FULL TEXT
Eric L. Hurwitz, Kristi RandhawaM Hainan Yu, Pierre Côté, Scott Haldeman
Office of Public Health Studies,
University of Hawaii,
M?noa, Honolulu, HI, USA.
PURPOSE: This article summarizes relevant findings related to low back and neck pain from the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) reports for the purpose of informing the Global Spine Care Initiative.
METHODS: We reviewed and summarized back and neck pain burden data from two studies that were published in Lancet in 2016, namely: "Global, regional, and national incidence, prevalence, and years lived with disability for 310 diseases and injuries, 1990-2015: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2015" and "Global, regional, and national disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) for 315 diseases and injuries and healthy life expectancy (HALE), 1990-2015: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2015."
RESULTS: In 2015, low back and neck pain were ranked the fourth leading cause of disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) globally just after ischemic heart disease, cerebrovascular disease, and lower respiratory infection {low back and neck pain DALYs [thousands]: 94 941.5 [95% uncertainty interval (UI) 67 745.5-128 118.6]}. In 2015, over half a billion people worldwide had low back pain and more than a third of a billion had neck pain of more than 3 months duration. Low back and neck pain are the leading causes of years lived with disability in most countries and age groups.
CONCLUSION: Low back and neck pain prevalence and disability have increased markedly over the past 25 years and will likely increase further with population aging. Spinal disorders should be prioritized for research funding given the huge and growing global burden. These slides can be retrieved under Electronic Supplementary Material.
KEYWORDS: Back pain; Global burden of disease; Neck pain; Spine
From the FULL TEXT Article:
Introduction
People are living longer, on average, but the health-related
quality of life has not kept pace with enhanced longevity,
resulting in an expansion of morbidity. [1] Low back and
neck pain are conditions affecting an increasing number of
individuals in terms of prevalence and disability. [2, 3] The
2015 Global Burden of Disease Study of injuries and risk
factors brought together over 1800 independent experts in
more than 120 countries and territories. [4] This study highlighted
areas where improvements can be made in healthcare
delivery. The 2015 Global Burden of Disease Study
analyzed 249 causes of death, 315 diseases and injuries,
and 79 risk factors for 195 countries and territories between
1990 and 2015. Incidence and prevalence were estimated for
2619 sequelae of 310 causes for 591 geographical regions
using 60,900 data sources for the years 1990, 1995, 2000,
2005, 2010, and 2015. Four main papers were published for
the Global Burden of Disease Study. [3, 5–7] Our objective
is to summarize the methods and findings of two of the four
capstone papers that include outcomes relevant to neck and
back pain. [3, 7] These papers reported global data from
1990 to 2015 on the prevalence, years lived with disability
(YLD), and disability-adjusted life years (DALYs), the sum
of years of potential life lost due to premature mortality and
the years of productive life lost due to disability. [8]
The World Spine Care (WSC) vision is “a world in
which everyone has access to the highest quality spine
care possible.” (www.world spine care.org) The WSC created
the Global Spine Care Initiative (GSCI) to develop an
evidence-based, practical, sustainable, and scalable spine
health-care pathway and model of care that can be implemented
to underserved communities. A better understanding
of the global burden of spine pain is needed. Therefore,
the objective of this paper is to summarize relevant findings
and trends related to back and neck pain from the most upto-
date 2015 GBD reports for the purpose of informing the
GSCI, identifying critical global spine care and research
gaps and needs, and offering potential explanations for differences
between estimates of community and global burden.
Methods
We summarized the methods and findings of two of the four
capstone papers that include outcomes relevant to neck and
back pain. [3, 7] From these papers, we summarized data
on the prevalence, years lived with disability (YLD), and
disability-adjusted life years (DALYs). [8]
Global burden of disease survey
The global burden estimates for low back pain and neck
pain were established through eight steps: (1) establishing
a case definition; (2) establishing health states; (3) systematic
reviews; (4) establishing disability weights; (5) adding
national health surveys; (6) performing Bayesian metaregression;
(7) performing severity distribution; and (8)
finalizing YLD estimates. [2, 9] The GBD Neck Pain Expert
Group and GBD Low Back Pain Expert Group performed
steps 1–3, and the GBD Core Team performed the remaining
steps. [2, 9] We have provided summaries of the case
definitions, establishing health states, measures of burden,
and establishing disability weights used in the GBD reports
below.
Measures of burden
Disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) is an overall summary
measure of population health that the GBD uses,
which combines years of life lost due to premature mortality
(YLLs) and years lived with disability (YLDs). [10]
Established disability weights
For GBD 2010, a comprehensive re-estimation of disability
weights was carried out through a large-scale empirical
study. Household surveys were conducted in five countries
that were diverse in languages, cultures, and socioeconomic
status. The surveys used paired comparison questions, where
respondents considered two hypothetical individuals with
different, randomly selected health states and indicated
which person they believed was healthier. An open access
web survey was also used that asked additional questions
about population health equivalence, which compared the
overall health benefits of various life-saving or disease prevention
programs. [11] An analysis of the paired comparison
data was performed using probit regression analysis.
Results from the population health equivalence responses
were used to anchor results from the paired comparisons on
the disability weight units between 0 (no loss of health) and
1 (loss equivalence to death). [11] In 2013, additional Webbased
surveys were completed in four European countries
and combined with data previously completed in the GBD
2010 disability weights measurement study. [12]
Socio?demographic index
The GBD investigators computed a summary measure for
each geographic location in 2015 called the Socio-Demographic
Index (SDI) that takes into account per capita
income, years of education, and fertility rate. [6, 7] Expected
disease-specific YLDs and DALYs based on the SDI for each
location were computed and compared to observed YLDs
and DALYs, yielding observed to expected ratio measures of
disease burden that exceed, are consistent with, or lag behind
expectation based on the SDI components. [6, 7]
Taking uncertainty into account
To account for uncertainty in estimation due to sampling,
model estimation, and model specification (e.g., variable
study sample sizes, adjustments from non-reference definitions,
parameter and disability weight uncertainty), 95%
uncertainty intervals (UIs) were derived from 1000 draws
from the posterior distribution of each step in the estimation
process (the UIs reflect the ordinal 25th and 975th draw). [7]
Definitions of low back pain and neck pain
The case definition for low back pain (LBP) was LBP
(± pain referred into one or both lower limbs) that lasts for
at least 1 day. [13] The ‘low back’ was defined as the area
on the posterior aspect of the body from the lower margin
of the 12th ribs to the lower gluteal fold. [2] The case definition
for neck pain was: neck pain [± pain referred into the
upper limb(s)] that lasts for at least 1 day. [2] The anatomical
region of the neck was defined according to the recommendation
by The Bone and Joint Decade 2000–2010 Task Force
on Neck Pain and its Associated Disorders. [14] ‘Neck or
shoulder’ pain was assumed to be a proxy for ‘neck’ pain.
Health states
The GBD low back and neck pain expert groups developed
a series of sequelae to characterize the different levels of
severity considering the variation in functional loss associated
with acute and chronic neck pain with or without arm
pain, and acute and chronic LBP with or without leg pain.
Results
Burden
Table 1
|
Table 1 reports the global prevalence numbers of low
back and neck pain and YLDs caused by these conditions.
The global point prevalence of low back pain and
neck pain of greater than 3 months increased by 18.7%
from 2005 to 2015. [3] Specifically, the global prevalence
of low back pain of more than 3 months duration
has increased by 17.3% [539,907,000 (95% UI
521,449,000–559,556,000)] and neck pain of more than
3 months duration has increased by 21.1% [358,007,000
(95% UI 313,408,000–409,411,000)] over the last 10 years
[3]. Low back and neck pain YLD remain the top cause of
global YLD since 1990. [3]
Age-specific global rankings of low back and neck
pain YLDs and DALYs are reported in Online Resource
Table 1. Globally, in 2015, low back and neck pain were
the leading causes of YLD in persons 25–64 years old, second
leading cause of YLD in those 20–24 or 65–79 year
olds, third leading cause of YLD in those aged 80 +, and
fourth leading cause of YLD in 15–19 year olds. [3] Furthermore,
the global YLD caused by low back and neck
pain has increased 18.6% (95% UI 17.6% to 19.6%) from
2005 to 2015. [3] Similarly, YLD caused by low back
pain alone increased by 17.2% (95% UI 16.4–18.1%) and
YLD caused by neck pain increased by 21.0% (95% UI
18.9–23.2%) over the last 10 years. [3]
The rankings of low back and neck pain YLDs and
DALYs by geographic area are reported in Online
Resource Table 2. Low back and neck pain were the leading
cause of disability in all high-income countries, the
leading cause of YLD for all but two countries in Latin
America and the Caribbean (Haiti and Venezuela were the
exceptions), and the leading cause of YLD for three out
of five countries in South Asia (second leading cause of
YLD in India and Pakistan). [3] Low back and neck pain
were the leading cause of disability in every geographical
region within central Europe, eastern Europe, and central
Asia and the leading cause of YLD in 9/46 Sub-Saharan
African countries. [3] Low back and neck pain YLDs and
DALYs were greater than expected in North America and
Europe, and generally consistent with or less than expectation
based on the SDI in most other locations (see Online
Resource Table 2).
Determinants
Occupational ergonomic factors (e.g., heavy manual lifting,
excessive bending and twisting, whole body vibration)
and high body mass index (BMI) are estimated to be
responsible for 30.9% [95% confidence interval (CI) 29.2,
32.5] and 5.5% (95% CI 3.4–7.6) of YLD due to low back
pain. [7] The GBD investigators estimate that the highest
occupational risks of LBP are in service industries and
manual work such as agriculture, and although the proportion
of the workforce engaged in agriculture may decline
in the coming years, they estimate that almost 65% of the
burden would remain. [7]
Trends
In 1990, low back and neck pain were ranked as the 12th
leading cause of DALYs globally; in 2005, the 8th leading
cause, moving up to 4th in 2015, after ischemic heart disease,
cerebrovascular disease, and lower respiratory infection. [7] From 1990 to 2005, DALYs from low back and
neck pain increased by 34.5%, and from 2005 to 2015 by
18.6% (from 1990 to 2015 low back and neck pain DALYs
increased by 59.5%). In 2015, low back and neck pain was
the leading cause of disability in most countries (second
leading cause of DALYs in high-income countries after
ischemic heart disease). [7] A reason for this increase may
be aging populations around the world.
Both low back and
neck pain have a higher prevalence in older age groups;
therefore, as life expectancy increases and the number of
older individuals increases compared to the number of
younger individuals, we may see an increase in conditions
prevalent in older age groups (i.e., expansion of morbidity). [3] Other risk factors that may influence an increase in
spinal pain include overweight and obesity. [7] As the GBD
report shows, painful musculoskeletal disorders are the leading
cause of disability globally and great threats to health
in general; because of their effects on mobility, the threats
will likely only worsen as the population ages. Although disability
estimates and rankings have increased over time, the
true magnitude of increased burden of disease attributable
to low back and neck pain is unknown due to uncaptured
sources of uncertainty and to differences in case definitions
over time. [10]
Discussion
Gaps in the GBD reports informing future research
Although there is a large body of research in the area of
spinal disorders, including neck and back pain, notable gaps
remain in our understanding of the epidemiology of these
conditions in both developed and emerging countries. The
global burden of disease reports give us a standardized,
comprehensive indication of the burden, yet the data are
based on estimates with many underlying disability weighting,
modeling, and other assumptions. GBD investigators
acknowledge the challenge of quantifying the burden of
disease accurately given the variety of data sources, variable
data quality, the range of biases, and data gaps in many
jurisdictions. With respect to spinal disorders, definitions of
neck and back pain vary among studies, which affects who
is included and excluded in the study populations. This may
result in high variability in prevalence between studies and
thus affect the GBD prevalence estimates.
In addition, as noted in the GBD reports, the largest data
gaps regarding spinal disorders and other non-communicable
diseases exist because data on these conditions and
their sequelae are not routinely collected and reported in
systematic fashion in many jurisdictions (e.g., low back and
neck pain, as well as other high ranking YLD disorders had
data representativeness indices under 50%). GBD investigators
recommend that countries centralize and invest in
population-level epidemiological data systems for conditions
responsible for high YLD (such as low back and neck pain).
They also recommend that journal editors require authors of
epidemiological studies to include data on functional health
status as well as severity, distribution, and duration of symptoms.
These research gaps are well within our abilities to
address. Greater efforts should be applied to gather data on
spine disorders in communities that are most in need. World
Spine Care and the Global Spine Care Initiative are helping
to address these data gaps using participatory action research
methods, collecting and analyzing qualitative, epidemiologic
and outcomes data from low- and middle-income communities
and designing and testing models of care and data collection
systems with the goal of reducing disability due to
spinal disorders worldwide. [15, 16]
Differences between global and community estimates
There are large variances between estimates of global versus
community prevalence of spinal disorders. As we have
reported elsewhere [17], methodological variability across
studies may be due to differences in case definitions, recall
periods, modes of data collection, and validation of the
instruments used or the representativeness of the samples.
These issues affect the estimates and our ability to make
valid comparisons between communities and populations.
In general, studies that specify a minimum episode duration
(e.g., 1 day, 3 months) have lower prevalence estimates
than ones with non-specified episode duration [18], but even
so the range of estimates is variable.
Heterogeneity in case
definitions (e.g., “back pain”, “low back pain”, “dorsolumbar”)
result in different prevalence estimates. Prevalence
estimates are higher in surveys of self-reported pain than in
health-care utilization surveys. Large variation within and
between studies of different modes of data collection precludes
accurate estimates and meaningful inferences regarding
the true frequency and impact of spinal pain within and
between communities at single points and over time. [19–21]
For example, when using a checklist to indicate musculoskeletal
symptoms, there is an expectation that prevalence
will be higher than when using more open ended or generally
worded descriptions of the musculoskeletal disease and
symptoms. [20]
Conclusion
The 2015 Global Burden of Disease Study has highlighted
the enormous global burden of spinal disorders. Lower back
and neck pain was the leading cause of disability in 2015. [7] Globally, the prevalence of low back and neck pain has
increased by 18.7% over the last 10 years and YLD caused
by low back and neck pain has increased by 18.6% over the
last 10 years. [7] Given the growing global burden of spinal
disorders and the adverse personal and societal effects
on quality of life and work ability, we agree with the GBD
authors that low back and neck pain should be a priority for
future research on prevention and therapy, especially critical
as the worldwide population increases in size and average
age. Large heterogeneity in observed to expected burden
associated with back and neck pain indicates differences in
how health systems are meeting population health needs.
As noted by GBD, research funders are increasingly using
DALYs for prioritizing decisions.
Therefore, conditions
highly prevalent and disabling, but historically underfunded
(such as low back and neck pain and other musculoskeletal
conditions) in populations with relatively low health-care
market power (e.g., low- and middle-income communities)
should receive more attention, research, and resources.
This is a position fully endorsed and being put into place in
several low- and middle-income communities by the World
Spine Care and the Global Spine Care Initiative. With
increasing disability from back and neck pain, these research
and health-care efforts on prevention and therapy must be
implemented more widely if we hope to compress morbidity
in both absolute (fewer years lost due to functional health
loss) and relative (lower ratio of years of functional health
lost to life expectancy) terms.
Funding
The Global Spine Care Initiative and this study were funded
by grants from the Skoll Foundation and NCMIC Foundation. World
Spine Care provided financial management for this project. The funders
had no role in study design, analysis, or preparation of this paper.
Conflicts of interest
EH declares he is a consultant for: RAND Corporation;
EBSCO Information Services; Southern California University
of Health Sciences; Western University of Health Sciences. Data and
Safety Monitoring Committee Chair, Palmer Center for Chiropractic
Research. Research Committee Co-chair, World Spine Care. KR
declares funding to UOIT from Skoll Foundation, NCMIC Foundation
through World Spine Care. HY declares funding to UOIT from
Skoll Foundation, NCMIC Foundation through World Spine Care. PC
is funded by a Canada Research Chair in Disability Prevention and
Rehabilitation at the University of Ontario Institute of Technology,
and declares funding to UOIT from Skoll Foundation, NCMIC Foundation
through World Spine Care. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
Canada. Research Chair Ontario Ministry of Finance. Financial
Services Commission of Ontario. Ontario Trillium Foundation, ELIB
Mitac. Fond de Recherche and Sante du Quebec. SH declares funding
to UOIT from Skoll Foundation, NCMIC Foundation through World
Spine Care. Clinical Policy Advisory Board and stockholder, Palladian
Health. Advisory Board, SpineHealth.com. Book Royalties, McGraw
Hill. Travel expense reimbursement—CMCC Board.
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