Trends in incidence rates of acute myocardial infarction and stroke among immigrant groups in Norway, 1999-2019: the NCDNOR project
- PMID: 40185501
- PMCID: PMC11973780
- DOI: 10.1136/openhrt-2024-003114
Trends in incidence rates of acute myocardial infarction and stroke among immigrant groups in Norway, 1999-2019: the NCDNOR project
Abstract
Aims: We aimed to study time trends of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and stroke incidence rates among immigrant groups living in Norway, with a special focus on immigrants from South Asia and former Yugoslavia.
Methods: All incident AMI and stroke events were identified in Norwegian residents aged 35-79 years during 1996-2019 using hospital and cause of death registry data. A 3-year wash-out period was used to identify incident events. Thus, cases were counted from 1999 onwards. We calculated annual age-standardised incidence rates using direct standardisation. Poisson regression was used to calculate the average annual change in incidence rates of AMI and stroke and to study differences between immigrant groups and the Norwegian-born population.
Results: Age-standardised incidence rates of AMI were higher in immigrants from South Asia and former Yugoslavia than in the Norwegian-born population. For Norwegian-born men and women, and former Yugoslavian women, the annual age-standardised AMI incidence rates declined over the study period by 2.4%, 2.0% and 2.3%, respectively. South Asian men and women and former Yugoslavian men did not experience such a decline, although there was an apparent decline in the last 3 years of the period for South Asian men. For former Yugoslavian men, this resulted in increasing differences compared with Norwegian-born men. For stroke, all these groups had declining trends in incidence rates, and former Yugoslavian women had the strongest decline of 4.3% annually.
Conclusion: During 1999-2019, immigrants from South Asia and former Yugoslavia did not experience the same beneficial decline in AMI incidence as the Norwegian-born population. However, both immigrant groups experienced similar or larger declines in the incidence of stroke as Norwegian-born men and women.
Keywords: Coronary Artery Disease; Epidemiology; Myocardial Infarction; Stroke.
© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2025. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ Group.
Conflict of interest statement
Competing interests: None declared.
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References
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- Ariansen I, Igland J, Ellekjær H, et al. Time trends in stroke incidence rates in Norway 2001-2014: Analyses from the CVDNOR project. Nor J Epidemiol. 2018 doi: 10.5324/nje.v28i1.2925. - DOI
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- Kringeland E, Slungård GF, Forster RB, et al. Norwegian Institute of Public Health; 2023. Hjerte- og karregisteret. Rapport for 2022 (The Norwegian Cardiovascular Disease Registry – Report for 2022)
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