Raghu Ram Achar
56203243200
Publications - 2
The global, regional, and national burden of cancer, 1990–2023, with forecasts to 2050: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2023
Amani Alansari
Ibukun Modupe Adesiyan
Abdallah H.A. Abd Al Magied
Mohammed Altigani Abdalla
Arash Abdollahi
Wael M. Abdel-Rahman
Aminu Kende Abubakar
Ahmed Abu-Zaid
Kamoru Ademola Adedokun
Nurudeen A. Adegoke
Aanuoluwapo Adeyimika Afolabi
Mohadese Ahmadzade
Anisuddin Ahmed
Fahmi Y. Al-Ashwal
Dolapo Emmanuel Ajala
Ashraf Nabiel Abdalla
Raghu Ram Achar
Eman Abu-Gharbieh
Lisa C. Adams
Muayyad M. Ahmad
Maryam Abbasalipour bashash
Mesfin Abebe
Armita Abedi
Sajjad Ahmad
Syed Anees Ahmed
Usha Adiga
Faisal Ahmad
Sajjad Ahmad
A. Bhoomadevi
Aqeel Ahmad
Lisa M. Force
Hasan Aalruz
Kayleigh Bhangdia
Jonathan M. Kocarnik
Miranda L. May
Feleke Doyore Agide
Andrew Crist
Williams Agyemang-Duah
Roland Eghoghosoa Akhigbe
Karolina Akinosoglou
Omar Al Omari
Alemwork Abie
Hana J. Abukhadijah
Muhammad Sohail Afzal
Danish Ahmad
Amir Mahmoud Ahmadzade
Salah Al Awaidy
Nasir Abbas
Maryam Abbasalipour bashash
Hanadi Al Hamad
Syed Mahfuz Al Hasan
Samar Abd Elhafeez
Navidha Aggarwal
Gasha Salih Ahmed
Mehrunnisha Sharif Ahmed
Meqdad Saleh Ahmed
Muktar Beshir Ahmed
Nesredin Ahmed
Syed Anees Ahmed
Marjan Ajami
Mohammad Al Qadire
Suneth Buddhika Agampodi
Khurshid Ahmad
César Agostinis Sobrinho
Tauseef Ahmad
Elham Ahmadi
Ayman Ahmed
Meriem Abdoun
Salahdein Aburuz
Yazan Al Thaher
Zufishan Alam
Lucas Guimarães Abreu
Lawan Hassan Adamu
Bhoomadevi A
Louise Penberthy
Natalie Pritchett
Alistair Acheson
Lee Deitesfeld
Ahmed M. Afifi
Bright Opoku Ahinkorah
Fatemeh Afrashteh
Qorinah Estiningtyas Sakilah Adnani
Juan Manuel Acuna
Hasan Aalruz
Arman Abdous
Auwal Abdullahi
Bilyaminu Abubakar
Isaac Yeboah Addo
Syed Hani Abidi
Olumide Abiodun
Hassan Abolhassani
Richard Gyan Aboagye
Ulric Sena Abonie
Habeeb Omoponle Adewuyi
Parsa Abdi
Wakgari Mosisa Abdisa
Luai A. Ahmed
Victor Adekanmbi
Ibrar Ahmed
Daba Abdissa
Arya Afrooghe
Omar Ali Mohammed Al Zaabi
Khurshid Alam
Leticia Akua Adzigbli
Nasir Abbas
Prince Owusu Adoma
Khurshid Ahmad
Publication Name: Lancet
Publication Date: 2025-10-11
Volume: 406
Issue: 10512
Page Range: 1565-1586
Description:
Background: Cancer is a leading cause of death globally. Accurate cancer burden information is crucial for policy planning, but many countries do not have up-to-date cancer surveillance data. To inform global cancer-control efforts, we used the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) 2023 framework to generate and analyse estimates of cancer burden for 47 cancer types or groupings by age, sex, and 204 countries and territories from 1990 to 2023, cancer burden attributable to selected risk factors from 1990 to 2023, and forecasted cancer burden up to 2050. Methods: Cancer estimation in GBD 2023 used data from population-based cancer registration systems, vital registration systems, and verbal autopsies. Cancer mortality was estimated using ensemble models, with incidence informed by mortality estimates and mortality-to-incidence ratios (MIRs). Prevalence estimates were generated from modelled survival estimates, then multiplied by disability weights to estimate years lived with disability (YLDs). Years of life lost (YLLs) were estimated by multiplying age-specific cancer deaths by the GBD standard life expectancy at the age of death. Disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) were calculated as the sum of YLLs and YLDs. We used the GBD 2023 comparative risk assessment framework to estimate cancer burden attributable to 44 behavioural, environmental and occupational, and metabolic risk factors. To forecast cancer burden from 2024 to 2050, we used the GBD 2023 forecasting framework, which included forecasts of relevant risk factor exposures and used Socio-demographic Index as a covariate for forecasting the proportion of each cancer not affected by these risk factors. Progress towards the UN Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) target 3.4 aim to reduce non-communicable disease mortality by a third between 2015 and 2030 was estimated for cancer. Findings: In 2023, excluding non-melanoma skin cancers, there were 18·5 million (95% uncertainty interval 16·4 to 20·7) incident cases of cancer and 10·4 million (9·65 to 10·9) deaths, contributing to 271 million (255 to 285) DALYs globally. Of these, 57·9% (56·1 to 59·8) of incident cases and 65·8% (64·3 to 67·6) of cancer deaths occurred in low-income to upper-middle-income countries based on World Bank income group classifications. Cancer was the second leading cause of deaths globally in 2023 after cardiovascular diseases. There were 4·33 million (3·85 to 4·78) risk-attributable cancer deaths globally in 2023, comprising 41·7% (37·8 to 45·4) of all cancer deaths. Risk-attributable cancer deaths increased by 72·3% (57·1 to 86·8) from 1990 to 2023, whereas overall global cancer deaths increased by 74·3% (62·2 to 86·2) over the same period. The reference forecasts (the most likely future) estimate that in 2050 there will be 30·5 million (22·9 to 38·9) cases and 18·6 million (15·6 to 21·5) deaths from cancer globally, 60·7% (41·9 to 80·6) and 74·5% (50·1 to 104·2) increases from 2024, respectively. These forecasted increases in deaths are greater in low-income and middle-income countries (90·6% [61·0 to 127·0]) compared with high-income countries (42·8% [28·3 to 58·6]). Most of these increases are likely due to demographic changes, as age-standardised death rates are forecast to change by –5·6% (–12·8 to 4·6) between 2024 and 2050 globally. Between 2015 and 2030, the probability of dying due to cancer between the ages of 30 years and 70 years was forecasted to have a relative decrease of 6·5% (3·2 to 10·3). Interpretation: Cancer is a major contributor to global disease burden, with increasing numbers of cases and deaths forecasted up to 2050 and a disproportionate growth in burden in countries with scarce resources. The decline in age-standardised mortality rates from cancer is encouraging but insufficient to meet the SDG target set for 2030. Effectively and sustainably addressing cancer burden globally will require comprehensive national and international efforts that consider health systems and context in the development and implementation of cancer-control strategies across the continuum of prevention, diagnosis, and treatment. Funding: Gates Foundation, St Jude Children's Research Hospital, and St Baldrick's Foundation.
Open Access: Yes
Burden of 375 diseases and injuries, risk-attributable burden of 88 risk factors, and healthy life expectancy in 204 countries and territories, including 660 subnational locations, 1990–2023: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2023
Jeza Muhamad Abdul Aziz
Shehab Uddin Al Abid
Niveen M.E. Abu-Rmeileh
Rana Kamal Abu Farha
Cristiana Abbafati
Barkhad Aden Abdeeq
Mohammed Altigani Abdalla
Nadin M.I. Abdel Razeq
Ahmed Abdelrahman Abdelgalil
Wael M. Abdel-Rahman
Reda Abdel-Hameed
Aminu Kende Abubakar
Michael Abdelmasseh
Kamoru Ademola Adedokun
Nurudeen A. Adegoke
Isaac Ayodeji Adesina
Ashraf Nabiel Abdalla
Raghu Ram Achar
Habtamu Abebe Getahun
Eman Abu-Gharbieh
Lisa C. Adams
Armita Abedi
Usha Adiga
Mitra Abbasifard
Mohammad Amin Aalipour
A. Bhoomadevi
Hazim S. Ababneh
Ukachukwu O. Abaraogu
Dariush Abtahi
Rizwan Suliankatchi Abdulkader
Ripon Kumar Adhikary
Mohd Adnan
Simon I. Hay
Kanyin Liane Ong
Damian F. Santomauro
Biruk Beletew Abate
Hasan Aalruz
Mohsen Abbasi-Kangevari
Sepideh Abdi
Roberto Ariel Abeldaño Zuñiga
Mohammad Abdollahi
E. S. Abhilash
Alemwork Abie
Hana J. Abukhadijah
Nasir Abbas
Ilana N. Ackerman
Mesafint Molla Adane
Zenaw Debasu Addisu
Rufus Adesoji Adedoyin
Emad M. Abdallah
Samar Abd Elhafeez
Olorunsola Israel Adeyomoye
Meriem Abdoun
Salahdein Aburuz
Mahmoud Abdelnabi
Lucas Guimarães Abreu
Apurba Acharya
Lawan Hassan Adamu
Oluwafemi Atanda Adeagbo
Qorinah Estiningtyas Sakilah Adnani
Sherief Abd-Elsalam
Adam Abdullahi
Deldar Morad Abdulah
Toufik Abdul-Rahman
Asrat Agalu Abejew
Fuad Hamdi A. Abuadas
Kulmira Abdykerimova
Aidin Abedi
Olugbenga Olusola Abiodun
Shady Abohashem
Nagah M. Abourashed
Mohamed Abouzid
Dmitry Abramov
Roberto Ariel Abeldaño Zuñiga
Juan Manuel Acuna
Anirudh Balakrishna Acharya
Ousman Adal
Hasan Aalruz
Arman Abdous
Auwal Abdullahi
Bilyaminu Abubakar
Isaac Yeboah Addo
Sawsan Abuhammad
David Adedia
Syed Hani Abidi
Olumide Abiodun
Hassan Abolhassani
Richard Gyan Aboagye
Ulric Sena Abonie
Habeeb Omoponle Adewuyi
Oyelola A. Adegboye
Isaac Akinkunmi Adedeji
Ahmad Y. Abuhelwa
Dina Abushanab
Tajudeen Adesanmi Adebisi
Oluwatobi E. Adegbile
Olumide Thomas Adeleke
Miracle Ayomikun Adesina
Temitayo Esther Adeyeoluwa
Leticia Akua Adzigbli
Nasir Abbas
Prince Owusu Adoma
Kishor Adhikari
Salahdein Aburuz
Rizwan Suliankatchi Abdulkader
Publication Name: Lancet
Publication Date: 2025-10-18
Volume: 406
Issue: 10513
Page Range: 1873-1922
Description:
Background For more than three decades, the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) has provided a framework to quantify health loss due to diseases, injuries, and associated risk factors. This paper presents GBD 2023 findings on disease and injury burden and risk-attributable health loss, offering a global audit of the state of world health to inform public health priorities. This work captures the evolving landscape of health metrics across age groups, sexes, and locations, while reflecting on the remaining post-COVID-19 challenges to achieving our collective global health ambitions. Methods The GBD 2023 combined analysis estimated years lived with disability (YLDs), years of life lost (YLLs), and disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) for 375 diseases and injuries, and risk-attributable burden associated with 88 modifiable risk factors. Of the more than 310 000 total data sources used for all GBD 2023 (about 30% of which were new to this estimation round), more than 120 000 sources were used for estimation of disease and injury burden and 59 000 for risk factor estimation, and included vital registration systems, surveys, disease registries, and published scientific literature. Data were analysed using previously established modelling approaches, such as disease modelling meta-regression version 2.1 (DisMod-MR 2.1) and comparative risk assessment methods. Diseases and injuries were categorised into four levels on the basis of the established GBD cause hierarchy, as were risk factors using the GBD risk hierarchy. Estimates stratified by age, sex, location, and year from 1990 to 2023 were focused on disease-specific time trends over the 2010–23 period and presented as counts (to three significant figures) and age-standardised rates per 100 000 person-years (to one decimal place). For each measure, 95% uncertainty intervals [UIs] were calculated with the 2·5th and 97·5th percentile ordered values from a 250-draw distribution. Findings Total numbers of global DALYs grew 6·1% (95% UI 4·0–8·1), from 2·64 billion (2·46–2·86) in 2010 to 2·80 billion (2·57–3·08) in 2023, but age-standardised DALY rates, which account for population growth and ageing, decreased by 12·6% (11·0–14·1), revealing large long-term health improvements. Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) contributed 1·45 billion (1·31–1·61) global DALYs in 2010, increasing to 1·80 billion (1·63–2·03) in 2023, alongside a concurrent 4·1% (1·9–6·3) reduction in age-standardised rates. Based on DALY counts, the leading level 3 NCDs in 2023 were ischaemic heart disease (193 million [176–209] DALYs), stroke (157 million [141–172]), and diabetes (90·2 million [75·2–107]), with the largest increases in age-standardised rates since 2010 occurring for anxiety disorders (62·8% [34·0–107·5]), depressive disorders (26·3% [11·6–42·9]), and diabetes (14·9% [7·5–25·6]). Remarkable health gains were made for communicable, maternal, neonatal, and nutritional (CMNN) diseases, with DALYs falling from 874 million (837–917) in 2010 to 681 million (642–736) in 2023, and a 25·8% (22·6–28·7) reduction in age-standardised DALY rates. During the COVID-19 pandemic, DALYs due to CMNN diseases rose but returned to pre-pandemic levels by 2023. From 2010 to 2023, decreases in age-standardised rates for CMNN diseases were led by rate decreases of 49·1% (32·7–61·0) for diarrhoeal diseases, 42·9% (38·0–48·0) for HIV/AIDS, and 42·2% (23·6–56·6) for tuberculosis. Neonatal disorders and lower respiratory infections remained the leading level 3 CMNN causes globally in 2023, although both showed notable rate decreases from 2010, declining by 16·5% (10·6–22·0) and 24·8% (7·4–36·7), respectively. Injury-related age-standardised DALY rates decreased by 15·6% (10·7–19·8) over the same period. Differences in burden due to NCDs, CMNN diseases, and injuries persisted across age, sex, time, and location. Based on our risk analysis, nearly 50% (1·27 billion [1·18–1·38]) of the roughly 2·80 billion total global DALYs in 2023 were attributable to the 88 risk factors analysed in GBD. Globally, the five level 3 risk factors contributing the highest proportion of risk-attributable DALYs were high systolic blood pressure (SBP), particulate matter pollution, high fasting plasma glucose (FPG), smoking, and low birthweight and short gestation—with high SBP accounting for 8·4% (6·9–10·0) of total DALYs. Of the three overarching level 1 GBD risk factor categories—behavioural, metabolic, and environmental and occupational—risk-attributable DALYs rose between 2010 and 2023 only for metabolic risks, increasing by 30·7% (24·8–37·3); however, age-standardised DALY rates attributable to metabolic risks decreased by 6·7% (2·0–11·0) over the same period. For all but three of the 25 leading level 3 risk factors, age-standardised rates dropped between 2010 and 2023—eg, declining by 54·4% (38·7–65·3) for unsafe sanitation, 50·5% (33·3–63·1) for unsafe water source, and 45·2% (25·6–72·0) for no access to handwashing facility, and by 44·9% (37·3–53·5) for child growth failure. The three leading level 3 risk factors for which age-standardised attributable DALY rates rose were high BMI (10·5% [0·1 to 20·9]), drug use (8·4% [2·6 to 15·3]), and high FPG (6·2% [–2·7 to 15·6]; non-significant). Interpretation Our findings underscore the complex and dynamic nature of global health challenges. Since 2010, there have been large decreases in burden due to CMNN diseases and many environmental and behavioural risk factors, juxtaposed with sizeable increases in DALYs attributable to metabolic risk factors and NCDs in growing and ageing populations. This long-observed consequence of the global epidemiological transition was only temporarily interrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic. The substantially decreasing CMNN disease burden, despite the 2008 global financial crisis and pandemic-related disruptions, is one of the greatest collective public health successes known. However, these achievements are at risk of being reversed due to major cuts to development assistance for health globally, the effects of which will hit low-income countries with high burden the hardest. Without sustained investment in evidence-based interventions and policies, progress could stall or reverse, leading to widespread human costs and geopolitical instability. Moreover, the rising NCD burden necessitates intensified efforts to mitigate exposure to leading risk factors—eg, air pollution, smoking, and metabolic risks, such as high SBP, BMI, and FPG—including policies that promote food security, healthier diets, physical activity, and equitable and expanded access to potential treatments, such as GLP-1 receptor agonists. Decisive, coordinated action is needed to address long-standing yet growing health challenges, including depressive and anxiety disorders. Yet this can be only part of the solution. Our response to the NCD syndemic—the complex interaction of multiple health risks, social determinants, and systemic challenges—will define the future landscape of global health. To ensure human wellbeing, economic stability, and social equity, global action to sustain and advance health gains must prioritise reducing disparities by addressing socioeconomic and demographic determinants, ensuring equitable health-care access, tackling malnutrition, strengthening health systems, and improving vaccination coverage. We live in times of great opportunity. Funding Gates Foundation and Bloomberg Philanthropies.
Open Access: Yes