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Prevalence of Parkinson's disease in Lagos, Southwestern Nigeria: a descriptive community-based study from the Transforming Parkinson's Care in Africa (TraPCAf) project.

Okubadejo, N. U.; Ojo, O. O.; Ogunyemi, A.; Agabi, O. P.; Oyeleye, A.; Nwaokorie, F. O.; Anyanwu, R.; Ezuduemoih, D.; Ibode, O.; Chabiri, S. S.; Madueke, O.; Ikwenu, E. E.; Morton, R.; Urasa, S.; Dekker, M.; Dotchin, C.; Fothergill-Misbah, N.; Cham, M.; Akpalu, A.; Walker, R.; TraPCAf Consortium,

2026-06-30 neurology
10.64898/2026.06.27.26356731 medRxiv
Show abstract

Background The global burden of Parkinson's disease (PD) has increased substantially over recent decades, driven by population ageing and rising age-standardized prevalence. In Africa, accurate estimates remain limited due to a lack of recent, methodologically robust population-based studies. Objectives To determine the current age-standardized and sex-specific prevalence rates of PD in Nigeria. Methods We conducted a 2-stage, cross-sectional population-based door-to-door survey among adults aged [≥]18 years in two densely populated urban local government areas in Lagos State, Nigeria, between April 1, 2024 and January 31, 2025. The first stage involved a household census and screening for parkinsonism using a standardized screening tool. The second stage consisted of in-person clinical assessment and diagnostic confirmation by physicians using established clinical diagnostic criteria. Crude and age-standardized prevalence rates (to the World Health Organization World Standard and European Standard Populations) were calculated. Results 31,009 individuals (52.7% female) from 13,222 households were surveyed, and 70 persons were diagnosed with PD. The crude prevalence ratio was 225.7 per 100,000, with higher prevalence in males (53/14658, 361.6) than females (17/16,351, 104.0). The age-standardized prevalence rate (95% confidence interval) was 193 per 100,000 (150 -- 245) (females: 86 (50 -- 137); males: 277 (207 -- 362)), and increased with advancing age. The diagnostic gap (previously undiagnosed) was 60.0% (42/70). Treatment gap (never treated) was 44/70 (62.9%). Conclusions The age-standardized prevalence of PD is higher than previously reported in sub-Saharan Africa. These findings provide contemporary data to inform updated estimates of disease burden and support health systems planning.

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