Clinical studySarcoidosis mortality in the United States, 1979–1991: An analysis of multiple-cause mortality data
References (21)
Sarcoidosis
- et al.
Epidemiology of sarcoidosis
Epidemiol Rev
(1983) - et al.
Current concepts of the pathogenesis of sarcoidosis
Am Rev Respir Dis
(1987) - et al.
Pathological studies on sarcoidosis autopsy. 1 Epidemiological features of 320 cases in Japan
Acta Pathol Japan
(1993) - et al.
Worldwide distribution and epidemiology of sarcoidosis
- et al.
Epidemiology of sarcoidosis: ethnic and geographic considerations
JNMA
(1974) - et al.
A worldwide review of sarcoidosis Proceedings of the VIIth International Conference on Sarcoidosis and Other Granulomatous Disorders
Ann NY Acad Sci
(1976) - et al.
A study of sarcoidosis Based on a combined investigation of 160 cases including 30 autopsies from the Johns Hopkins Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital
Medicine
(1952) international Classification of Diseases
(1980)Advance report of final mortality statistics, 1991
Cited by (153)
Predictors of Mortality in Sarcoidosis
2024, Clinics in Chest MedicineRecurrent Cardiac Sarcoidosis and Giant Cell Myocarditis After Heart Transplant: A Case Report and Systematic Literature Review
2023, American Journal of CardiologyCutaneous Sarcoidosis
2023, Dermatologic ClinicsPericardial Involvement in Sarcoidosis
2022, American Journal of CardiologyMyocarditis in systemic immune-mediated diseases: Prevalence, characteristics and prognosis. A systematic review
2022, Autoimmunity ReviewsCitation Excerpt :In Japan, cardiac involvement is reported to be the leading cause of death due to sarcoidosis, accounting for 77 to 85% of deaths [39,40]. By contrast, in the United States, 13 to 50% of sarcoid deaths have been attributed to myocardial involvement [41,42]. In a report on 320 autopsies in Japan since 1958, approximately 60% of the sarcoidosis autopsies described sarcoid lesions in the heart, lung or nervous system, the majority of which involving the heart [43].
Disparities in Sarcoidosis Mortality by Region, Urbanization, and Race in the United States: A Multiple Cause of Death Analysis
2019, American Journal of MedicineCitation Excerpt :Rates increased with time overall, but changes varied among race and sex subgroups. Previous studies showed that such an analysis limited to diagnosis of underlying cause presents an incomplete view of sarcoidosis mortality.5,6 When up to 20 causes associated with each death are studied, twice as many sarcoidosis-associated deaths are identified compared with sarcoidosis as the underlying cause of death only.