Cohort profile: the Korean National Health Examination Baseline (KNHEB) cohort for longitudinal health monitoring in South Korea.
Background: The Korean National Health Examination Baseline (KNHEB) cohort was established in 2019 by the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency and the National Health Insurance Service to address research gaps and improve standardized monitoring of the health effects of smoking and other modifiable risk factors. It provides scientific evidence to inform national policies on tobacco control and other health determinants, aiming to reduce preventable mortality and disease burden in South Korea.
Methods: The cohort includes 8,916,544 individuals aged ≥ 20 who underwent general health screenings in 2002-2003. It integrates three linked databases: insurance eligibility, medical visits (diagnostic codes, healthcare utilization), and health check-ups (behavioral risk factors, blood test results, etc.). Medical visit and health check-up data were collected until December 2018, while mortality records have been updated through 2019 and continue to be updated annually. At baseline, the mean age of participants was 44.2 years (SD 13.8). The mean follow-up duration was 16.2 years (SD 2.6) for health check-ups among all participants and 9.7 years (SD 4.6) for mortality among deceased individuals. The cohort enables long-term analysis of health outcomes, including cause-specific mortality based on death records and disease incidence identified through diagnostic codes and medical visit data.
Results: Analyses using the KNHEB cohort have provided key insights into smoking-related health risks. One study estimated that 60,213 smoking-attributable deaths occurred in South Korea in 2020, while another identified smoking intensity as the strongest predictor of all-cause mortality. Ongoing research include examining the effect of combined health-related factors (HRFs) on cause-specific mortality across age groups and investigating long-term smoking trajectories and alcohol consumption patterns in relation to major non-communicable diseases (NCDs).
Conclusions: The KNHEB cohort provides a large-scale, population-based dataset that supports comprehensive analyses of the long-term effects of modifiable risk factors on NCDs. Its findings contribute to evidence-based policymaking in South Korea and offer comparative insights for global research on chronic disease prevention and risk factor management. Furthermore, its standardized data collection and integration with health records facilitate cross-country comparisons, reinforcing its value as a model for large-scale epidemiological studies on NCDs.