The Burden of Inflammatory Bowel Disease in Gulf Cooperation Council Countries from 1990 to 2021 with Forecasting Projections to 2030: A Global Burden of Disease Study

  • Ahmed K. Alsaif
  • , Jawad S. Alnajjar
  • , Faisal A. Al-Harbi
  • , Ahmed A. Alsirhani
  • , Sultan S. Alruqaie
  • , Abdulaziz T. Alturki
  • , Mohammed A. Basuhail
  • , Abdulrhman K. Alabdulqader
  • , Ahmed A. Albadrani
  • , Ahmed Y. Azzam

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) represents a growing health challenge in regions undergoing socioeconomic transition. This study characterized IBD epidemiology across Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, forecasted future burden, and identified country-specific determinants to inform targeted health policy interventions. Methods: IBD data from the Global Burden of Disease study (1990–2021) were analyzed for all six GCC countries using descriptive epidemiology, temporal trend analysis, three forecasting models (Age-Period-Cohort, Joinpoint regression, Bayesian age-standardized rate modeling), and regression analyses to identify socioeconomic, environmental, gender-specific, and healthcare system factors associated with IBD burden variation. Results: Age-standardized IBD prevalence rates varied across GCC countries (28.92–42.93 per 100,000), with Qatar and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) showing the highest rates and fastest increases (967% and 898% since 1990). Kuwait uniquely demonstrated stable or slightly declining trends. Significant female predominance emerged in most countries (male ratio 0.70–0.91) with strong birth cohort effects (1970s cohorts showing 18–48% higher risk than 1950s cohorts). IBD manifested primarily as disability rather than a mortality burden. Projections indicate continued increases through 2030, potentially reaching 55–59 per 100,000 in Qatar and the UAE. Fast food outlet density, processed food imports, antibiotic consumption, and female vitamin D deficiency were the most significant modifiable risk factors. Conclusions: The GCC region faces a growing IBD epidemiological profile characterized by rising burden, female predominance, and generational differences in risk observations. Identification of modifiable determinants provides actionable targets for intervention, while country-specific projections offer a foundation for healthcare planning to address this challenge.

Original languageEnglish
Article number3104
JournalHealthcare (Switzerland)
Volume13
Issue number23
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2025

Keywords

  • Gulf Cooperation Council
  • epidemiology
  • global burden of disease
  • healthcare modeling
  • inflammatory bowel disease

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