Abstract
<jats:p>Purpose: Suicide mortality is underestimated due to misclassification under undetermined and accidental deaths. This study examined national trends in suicide and related external causes of death in Portugal from 2002 to 2023, by sex and age group, assessing potential shifts suggesting masked suicide and quantifying the relationship between undetermined, suicide, and accident death rates through ratio indices. Methods: Using official mortality data from Portugal's Statistics Institute (INE) for 2002-2023, we calculated age-standardised (SDR) and age-specific death rates (ASDR) for suicide (X60-X84), undetermined intent deaths (Y10-Y34), and unintentional deaths (V01-X59), disaggregated by sex and four age groups (15-24, 25-44, 45-64, 65+). We estimated undetermined-to-suicide (UnD:Suic) and undetermined-to-accidents (UnD:Accs) rate ratios for SDRs and ASDRs. Trends were analysed using joinpoint regression (APC/AAPC) and structural breakpoint analysis (Chow test, BIC). Results: Suicide SDRs declined across the period for males (AAPC: -2.25%) and females (AAPC: -1.32%), with the sharpest reductions among males aged 25-44 (AAPC: -2.56%) and females aged 65+ (AAPC: -2.44%). Deaths of undetermined intent rose steeply from 2002 to 2005-2006 and declined thereafter. Unintentional deaths declined in most age groups, except females aged 65+ (AAPC: +1.41%). Both ratio series peaked around 2005-2009, declined progressively through the 2010s, and reached their lowest values in 2021-2022. Age-specific analyses revealed a significant and sustained increase in both ratios among females aged 45-64. Structural breakpoints clustered around 2004, 2013-2015, and 2019-2020. Conclusion: Suicide mortality declined in Portugal from 2002 to 2023, but divergent trends in undetermined and accidental deaths across sex and age subgroups highlight ongoing misclassification. Age- and sex-specific ratio analyses identify the population subgroups where misclassification is most concentrated, providing a foundation for future imputation-based estimates of probable suicide burden.</jats:p>