Pollitt Ricardo A, Kaufman Jay S, Rose Kathryn M, Diez-Roux Ana V, Zeng Donglin, Heiss Gerardo
Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 137 E. Franklin Street, Bank of America Center, Chapel Hill, NC 27514, USA.
Eur J Epidemiol. 2007;22(1):55-66. doi: 10.1007/s10654-006-9082-1. Epub 2007 Jan 17.
Associations between childhood and adult socioeconomic status (SES) and adult levels of inflammatory markers (C-reactive protein [CRP], fibrinogen, white blood cell count [WBC], and von Willebrand factor [vWF]) were examined in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) Study cohort.
A total of 12,681 white and African-American participants provided information on SES (via education and social class) and place of residence in childhood and adulthood. Residences were linked to census data for neighborhood SES information. Multiple imputation was used to impute missing data. Hierarchical and linear regression were used to estimate the effects of SES and possible mediation by adult cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors.
Low childhood social class and education were associated with elevated levels of CRP, fibrinogen, WBC, and vWF (increments of 17%, 2%, 4% and 3% for lowest versus highest education in childhood, respectively) among whites. Findings were less consistent among African-Americans. Adult SES was more strongly associated with inflammation than childhood SES. Individual-level SES measures were more consistently associated with inflammation than neighborhood-level measures. Fibrinogen and WBC showed the most consistent associations with SES; the largest changes in inflammation by SES were observed for CRP. Covariate adjustment strongly attenuated these associations. Mediation of the SES-inflammation associations by BMI, smoking and HDL cholesterol (HDL-C) are suggested by these data.
Low individual- and neighborhood-level SES in childhood and adulthood are associated with modest increments in adult inflammatory burden. These associations may operate through the influence of low SES on traditional CVD risk factors, especially BMI, smoking and HDL-C.
在社区动脉粥样硬化风险(ARIC)研究队列中,研究了儿童期和成年期社会经济地位(SES)与成年期炎症标志物(C反应蛋白[CRP]、纤维蛋白原、白细胞计数[WBC]和血管性血友病因子[vWF])水平之间的关联。
共有12681名白人和非裔美国参与者提供了关于SES(通过教育程度和社会阶层)以及儿童期和成年期居住地的信息。将居住地与人口普查数据相链接以获取邻里SES信息。采用多重填补法填补缺失数据。使用分层线性回归来估计SES的影响以及成年心血管疾病(CVD)危险因素可能起到的中介作用。
在白人中,儿童期低社会阶层和低教育程度与CRP、纤维蛋白原、WBC和vWF水平升高相关(儿童期最低教育程度与最高教育程度相比,分别升高17%、2%、4%和3%)。在非裔美国人中,研究结果不太一致。成年期SES比儿童期SES与炎症的关联更强。个体层面的SES指标比邻里层面的指标与炎症的关联更一致。纤维蛋白原和WBC与SES的关联最为一致;SES导致的炎症最大变化出现在CRP上。协变量调整显著减弱了这些关联。这些数据表明,BMI、吸烟和高密度脂蛋白胆固醇(HDL-C)对SES与炎症之间的关联起到了中介作用。
儿童期和成年期个体及邻里层面的低SES与成年期炎症负担的适度增加相关。这些关联可能通过低SES对传统CVD危险因素的影响起作用,尤其是BMI、吸烟和HDL-C。