University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Department of Psychology, CB #3270, Davie Hall, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3270, USA.
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Department of Sociology, CB# 3210, 230 Hamilton Hall, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3210, USA.
Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2014 Feb;40:76-85. doi: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2013.10.019. Epub 2013 Nov 7.
Cases with very high C-reactive protein (CRP>10mg/L) are often dropped from analytic samples in research on risk for chronic physical and mental illness, but this convention could inadvertently result in excluding those most at risk. We tested whether young adults with very high CRP scored high on indicators of chronic disease risk. We also tested intergenerational pathways to and sex-differentiated correlates of very high CRP.
Data came from Waves I (ages 11-19) and IV (ages 24-34) of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (N=13,257). At Wave I, participants' parents reported their own education and health behaviors/health. At Wave IV, young adults reported their socioeconomic status, psychological characteristics, reproductive/health behaviors and health; trained fieldworkers assessed BMI, waist circumference, blood-pressure, and medication use, and collected bloodspots from which high-sensitivity CRP (hs-CRP) was assayed.
Logistic regression analyses revealed that many common indicators of chronic disease risk - including parental health/health behaviors reported 14 years earlier - were associated with very high CRP in young adults. Several of these associations attenuated with the inclusion of BMI. More than 75% of young adults with very high CRP were female. Sex differences in associations of some covariates and very high CRP were observed.
Especially among females, the exclusion of cases with very high CRP could result in an underestimation of "true" associations of CRP with both, chronic disease risk indicators and morbidity/mortality. In many instances, very high CRP could represent an extension of the lower CRP range when it comes to chronic disease risk.
在研究慢性身心疾病风险时,通常会将 C 反应蛋白(CRP)非常高(>10mg/L)的病例从分析样本中剔除,但这种做法可能会无意中排除那些风险最高的病例。我们检验了 CRP 非常高的年轻成年人是否在慢性病风险指标上得分较高。我们还检验了 CRP 非常高的代际途径和性别差异相关因素。
数据来自国家青少年健康纵向研究(N=13257)的第 I 波(11-19 岁)和第 IV 波(24-34 岁)。在第 I 波,参与者的父母报告了自己的教育和健康行为/健康状况。在第 IV 波,年轻成年人报告了自己的社会经济地位、心理特征、生殖/健康行为和健康状况;经过培训的现场工作人员评估了 BMI、腰围、血压和用药情况,并采集了血样,以测定高敏 C 反应蛋白(hs-CRP)。
逻辑回归分析显示,许多常见的慢性病风险指标——包括 14 年前报告的父母健康/健康行为——与年轻成年人 CRP 非常高有关。这些关联中的许多在纳入 BMI 后减弱了。超过 75%的 CRP 非常高的年轻成年人是女性。在一些协变量和 CRP 非常高的关联中观察到了性别差异。
特别是在女性中,排除 CRP 非常高的病例可能会导致 CRP 与慢性病风险指标和发病率/死亡率之间的“真实”关联被低估。在许多情况下,CRP 非常高可能代表 CRP 与慢性病风险的较低范围之间的延伸。