University of Wisconsin-Madison, 624 WARF Office Bldg., 610 N Walnut Street, Madison, WI 53726, USA.
Psychosom Med. 2010 Apr;72(3):290-300. doi: 10.1097/PSY.0b013e3181cfe4c2. Epub 2010 Jan 25.
To examine the associations between income and education and three markers of inflammation: interleukin-6 (IL-6), C-reactive protein (CRP), and fibrinogen. Socioeconomic status is inversely linked with health outcomes, but the biological processes by which social position "gets under the skin" to affect health are poorly understood.
Cross-sectional analyses involved participants (n = 704) from the second wave of the national population-based Survey of Midlife Development in the United States (MIDUS). Data on pretax household-adjusted income and educational attainment were collected by questionnaire and telephone interview, respectively. Detailed medical history interviews, inventories of medication, and fasting blood samples for assessment of inflammatory proteins were obtained during an overnight clinic stay.
All three inflammatory proteins were inversely associated with both income and education in bivariate analyses. However, multivariate regression models, adjusting for potential confounds, showed that only low income predicted higher levels of inflammatory proteins. Moreover, inclusion of IL-6 in the regression models for CRP and fibrinogen eliminated the associations with income.
These results suggest that income explains the association between education and peripheral inflammation. In short, the reason that higher education is linked to reduced peripheral inflammation is because it reduces the risk for low income status, which is what is directly associated with reduced peripheral inflammation. The findings also suggest that the links between income and both CRP and fibrinogen are mediated by IL-6. These observations help to sharpen our understanding of the relationship between social position and biological markers of illness in the United States.
探讨收入和教育水平与三种炎症标志物(白细胞介素 6(IL-6)、C 反应蛋白(CRP)和纤维蛋白原)之间的关联。社会经济地位与健康结果呈负相关,但社会地位通过何种生物学机制“影响”健康仍知之甚少。
本横断面分析的数据来自美国全国人口为基础的中年代发展研究(MIDUS)的第二波调查。家庭税前调整收入和教育程度的数据分别通过问卷和电话访谈收集。在一个过夜的诊所就诊期间,进行详细的病史访谈、药物清单和空腹血样,以评估炎症蛋白。
在单变量分析中,三种炎症蛋白均与收入和教育水平呈负相关。然而,多变量回归模型调整了潜在混杂因素后显示,只有低收入水平预测炎症蛋白水平更高。此外,将 IL-6 纳入 CRP 和纤维蛋白原的回归模型中,消除了与收入的关联。
这些结果表明,收入解释了教育水平与外周炎症之间的关联。简而言之,较高的教育水平与外周炎症减轻相关的原因是它降低了低收入状态的风险,而低收入状态与外周炎症减轻直接相关。研究结果还表明,收入与 CRP 和纤维蛋白原之间的联系是由 IL-6 介导的。这些观察结果有助于更深入地了解美国社会地位与疾病生物学标志物之间的关系。