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Aortic Aneurysm

Also known as abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA), thoracic aortic aneurysm (TAA)

An aneurysm is a balloon-like bulge in an artery. Arteries are blood vessels that carry blood from your heart to your organs. Aortic aneurysms are aneurysms that occur in the aorta, the main artery carrying oxygen-rich blood to your body. The aorta has thick walls that withstand normal blood pressure. However, certain medical problems, genetic conditions, and trauma can damage or weaken these walls. The force of blood pushing against the weakened or injured walls can cause an aneurysm.

An aortic aneurysm can grow large and either rupture or split. A split is called a dissection and, like a rupture, is life-threatening. Early diagnosis and treatment may prevent serious or life-threatening complications. However, aortic aneurysms can develop and grow large before causing any symptoms. Doctors may be able to slow the growth of an aortic aneurysm with medicines or repair it with surgery if it is found before it ruptures or dissects. [NIH]

GBD 2019 Non-Fatal Modeling Strategy

Aortic aneurysm is not currently modeled as a non-fatal model in GBD.

GBD 2019 Fatal Modeling Strategy

We included vital registration data in a standard CODEm approach to model aortic aneurysm. [GBD-2019-Capstone-Appendix]

Cause Hierarchy

Restrictions

The following table describes any restrictions in GBD 2019 on the effects of this cause (such as being only fatal or only nonfatal), as well as restrictions on the ages and sexes to which the cause applies.

GBD 2019 Cause Restrictions
Restriction Type Value Notes
Male only False  
Female only False  
YLL only True  
YLD only False  
YLL age group start 15 [15, 19 years), age_group_id=8
YLL age group end 125 [95, 125), age_group_id=235
YLD age group start NULL  
YLD age group end NULL  

Scope

Aortic aneurysm is only a fatal condition and has no GBD nonfatal model. Initial approach is to allow deaths to occur per the standard simulation approach for any GBD cause. The cause-specific mortality rate should be modified by tobacco smoking; this relationship is defined in the overall concept model document.

Assumptions and Limitations

Aortic aneurysm can be diagnosed via ultrasound and treated with either medication or surgery, which reduces the risk of mortality. However, as of GBD 2019, we do not estimate nonfatal burden for this cause.

Cause Model Diagram

State and Transition Data Tables

Definitions

State Definitions
State State Name Definition
S Susceptible to aortic aneurysm Simulant that has not been diagnosed with an aortic aneurysm

States Data

States Data
State Measure Value Notes
All cause-specific mortality (CSMR) \frac{\text{deaths\_c501}}{\text{population}} Post CoDCorrect cause-level CSMR

Transition Data

Transition Data
Transition Source Sink Value Notes
         

Data Sources

Data Sources
Measure Sources Description Notes
deaths_c501 codcorrect Deaths from aortic aneurysm  
population demography Mid-year population for given age/sex/year/location  

Validation Criteria

Compare CSMR experienced by simulants to CSMR from CoDCorrect in GBD

[NIH]Aortic Aneurysm. National Heart Lung and Blood Institute, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Retrieved 13 April 2021. https://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health-topics/aneurysm
[GBD-2019-Capstone-Appendix]Appendix to: GBD 2019 Diseases and Injuries Collaborators. Global burden of 369 diseases and injuries in 204 countries and territories, 1990–2019: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2019. The Lancet. 17 Oct 2020;396:1204-1222