Stroke mortality in Greece (2001-2021): Trends, sex differences, and the impact of population aging
Recommended Citation
Lioutas VA, Katsanos AH, Palaiodimou L, Theodorou A, Ellul J, Karapanayiotides T, Safouris A, Kargiotis O, Manios E, Giannopoulos S, Themistocleous M, Vadikolias K, Mitsias PD, and Tsivgoulis G. Stroke mortality in Greece (2001-2021): Trends, sex differences, and the impact of population aging. Int J Stroke 2025.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-14-2025
Publication Title
Int J Stroke
Keywords
Greece; Stroke mortality; cerebrovascular disease; decomposition analysis; epidemiological trends; population aging; sex differences
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite stroke being a leading cause of mortality in Greece, long-term national data on stroke mortality trends remain limited. This study aimed to describe trends in stroke mortality in Greece between 2001 and 2021, accounting for demographic shifts and changes in care delivery, using nationwide mortality and population data.
METHODS: We analyzed cause-of-death data from the Hellenic Statistical Authority (ELSTAT) for 2001-2021. Stroke deaths were defined using International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD-9) (430-438) and Tenth Revision (ICD-10) (I60-I69, G45x) codes. Crude and age-standardized mortality rates (using the GBD 2019 standard) were computed annually and stratified by sex. Negative binomial regression was used to estimate the average annual percent change (AAPC) in mortality. Sex-specific trends, age-specific rate ratios, and time interactions were examined. A decomposition analysis using the Das Gupta method was conducted to quantify the contribution of population aging versus changes in age-specific stroke mortality.
RESULTS: Between 2001 and 2021, crude stroke mortality declined from 171.1 to 116.5 per 100,000, and age-standardized mortality declined from 90.5 to 36.4 per 100,000. Crude mortality remained higher in women, but age-standardized mortality was consistently lower compared with men. The female advantage in age group-specific stroke mortality has narrowed over time and reversed in the ⩾80 age group where females experience higher mortality than men. The estimated AAPC for the overall population was -1.90%, corresponding to approximately 292 fewer stroke deaths per year. Decomposition analysis revealed that improvements in age-specific mortality outweighed the adverse effects of population aging.
CONCLUSION: Despite substantial population aging and rising crude all-cause mortality, stroke mortality in Greece has declined significantly over the past two decades. This trend likely reflects improvements in acute stroke care and reduced case fatality, rather than a decrease in incidence. Although recent efforts have expanded access to acute reperfusion therapies and stroke units, further gains are possible. Continued investment in national stroke systems and implementation of a comprehensive stroke registry are essential for sustaining and accelerating progress.
PubMed ID
41217260
ePublication
ePub ahead of print
First Page
17474930251389510
Last Page
17474930251389510
