Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, School of Public Health, Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Ramat Aviv, Tel Aviv, 69978, Israel.
Circulation. 2010 Jan 26;121(3):375-83. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.109.882555. Epub 2010 Jan 11.
Neighborhood of residence has been suggested to affect cardiovascular risk above and beyond personal socioeconomic status (SES). However, such data are currently lacking for patients with myocardial infarction (MI). We examined all-cause and cardiac mortality according to neighborhood SES in a cohort of MI patients.
Consecutive patients < or =65 years of age discharged from 8 hospitals in central Israel after incident MI in 1992 to 1993 were followed up through 2005. Individual data were obtained at study entry, including education, income, and employment. Neighborhood SES was estimated through a composite census-derived index developed by the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics. During follow-up, 326 deaths occurred in 1179 patients. Patients residing in disadvantaged neighborhoods had higher mortality rates, with 13-year survival estimates of 61%, 74%, and 82% in increasing tertiles (P(trend)<0.001). After adjustment for sociodemographic variables, traditional risk factors, MI severity indexes, and individual SES measures, the hazard ratios for death associated with neighborhood SES were 1.47 (95% confidence interval, 1.05 to 2.06) in the lower and 1.19 (95% confidence interval, 0.86 to 1.63) in the middle tertiles compared with the upper tertile (P(trend)=0.02). The respective hazard ratios were even stronger for cardiac death (1.63; 95% confidence interval, 1.09 to 2.25; and 1.41; 95% confidence interval, 0.96 to 2.07). In the final models, neighborhood context and several individual SES measures were concurrently associated with all-cause and cardiac mortality.
Neighborhood SES is strongly associated with long-term survival after MI. The association is partly, but not entirely, attributable to individual SES and clinical characteristics. These data support a multidimensional relationship between SES and MI outcome.
居住环境的邻里关系已被证明会影响心血管风险,超过个人的社会经济地位(SES)。然而,目前还缺乏心肌梗死(MI)患者的相关数据。我们在 MI 患者队列中检查了根据邻里 SES 的全因和心脏死亡率。
1992 年至 1993 年期间,以色列中部 8 家医院连续收治的年龄<65 岁的新发 MI 患者在 2005 年进行了随访。在研究开始时获得了个体数据,包括教育、收入和就业情况。邻里 SES 通过以色列中央统计局开发的综合人口普查衍生指数来估计。在随访期间,1179 名患者中有 326 人死亡。居住在不利邻里环境的患者死亡率更高,在递增三分位数中,13 年生存率估计分别为 61%、74%和 82%(趋势 P<0.001)。在校正了社会人口统计学变量、传统风险因素、MI 严重程度指数和个体 SES 指标后,与 SES 相关的死亡风险比在低 SES 分位组为 1.47(95%置信区间,1.05 至 2.06),在中 SES 分位组为 1.19(95%置信区间,0.86 至 1.63),与高 SES 分位组相比(趋势 P=0.02)。对于心脏性死亡,相应的风险比甚至更强(1.63;95%置信区间,1.09 至 2.25;和 1.41;95%置信区间,0.96 至 2.07)。在最终模型中,邻里环境和几个个体 SES 指标同时与全因和心脏死亡率相关。
邻里 SES 与 MI 后长期生存密切相关。这种关联部分归因于个体 SES 和临床特征,但并非完全如此。这些数据支持 SES 与 MI 结果之间存在多维关系。