NIH study finds leading risk factors and causes of death and disability underrepresented

Nov. 12, 2019

A study by National Institutes of Health (NIH) scientists in the Office of Disease Prevention (ODP) examined NIH grants and cooperative agreements during fiscal years 2012 through 2017 to determine the alignment of prevention research across NIH institutes and centers with leading risk factors and causes of death and disability in the U.S.

The study found that while the top-10 risk factors for death are associated with more than half of the deaths in the U.S., only a third of NIH-supported prevention research measured those risk factors as exposures or outcomes. Similarly, while seven out of every 10 Americans die from the 10 leading causes of death, fewer than three in 10 prevention research projects supported by the NIH measure these causes of death as exposures or outcomes. The study was published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) Network Open. 

The study revealed that most prevention research projects included an observational design or secondary data analysis, while relatively few included a clinical trial focused on preventing the leading risk factors and causes for death. Further, even though it is common for one person to have multiple risk factors (e.g., individuals who smoke also often have a poor diet and engage in little physical activity), few studies took advantage of this pattern to address multiple risk factors at the same time.

The analysis was limited by sampling only the most common types of grant awards and examining only primary and secondary prevention research in humans. The analysis excluded basic, pre-clinical and clinical research that might eventually lead to prevention research.

This report suggests there is an opportunity for the NIH to better align prevention research with the leading causes and risk factors for death and disability in the U.S., particularly by incorporating more clinical trials to evaluate interventions to prevent those risk factors and causes.

NIH has the release.