TY - JOUR T1 - Ischaemic heart disease in the former Soviet Union 1990–2015 according to the Global Burden of Disease 2015 Study JF - Heart JO - Heart DO - 10.1136/heartjnl-2016-311142 SP - heartjnl-2016-311142 AU - Adrianna Murphy AU - Catherine O Johnson AU - Gregory A Roth AU - Mohammad H Forouzanfar AU - Mohsen Naghavi AU - Marie Ng AU - Nana Pogosova AU - Theo Vos AU - Christopher J L Murray AU - Andrew E Moran Y1 - 2017/09/07 UR - http://heart.bmj.com/content/early/2017/09/07/heartjnl-2016-311142.abstract N2 - Objective The objective of this study was to compare ischaemic heart disease (IHD) mortality and risk factor burden across former Soviet Union (fSU) and satellite countries and regions in 1990 and 2015.Methods The fSU and satellite countries were grouped into Central Asian, Central European and Eastern European regions. IHD mortality data for men and women of any age were gathered from national vital registration, and age, sex, country, year-specific IHD mortality rates were estimated in an ensemble model. IHD morbidity and mortality burden attributable to risk factors was estimated by comparative risk assessment using population attributable fractions.Results In 2015, age-standardised IHD death rates in Eastern European and Central Asian fSU countries were almost two times that of satellite states of Central Europe. Between 1990 and 2015, rates decreased substantially in Central Europe (men −43.5% (95% uncertainty interval −45.0%, −42.0%); women −42.9% (−44.0%, −41.0%)) but less in Eastern Europe (men −5.6% (−9.0, –3.0); women −12.2% (−15.5%, −9.0%)). Age-standardised IHD death rates also varied within regions: within Eastern Europe, rates decreased −51.7% in Estonian men (−54.0, −47.0) but increased +19.4% in Belarusian men (+12.0, +27.0). High blood pressure and cholesterol were leading risk factors for IHD burden, with smoking, body mass index, dietary factors and ambient air pollution also ranking high.Conclusions Some fSU countries continue to experience a high IHD burden, while others have achieved remarkable reductions in IHD mortality. Control of blood pressure, cholesterol and smoking are IHD prevention priorities. ER -