Chang Shun-Chiao, Glymour Maria, Cornelis Marilyn, Walter Stefan, Rimm Eric B, Tchetgen Tchetgen Eric, Kawachi Ichiro, Kubzansky Laura D
From the Channing Division of Network Medicine, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA (S.-C.C., E.B.R.); Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences (S.-C.C., M.G., S.W., I.K., L.D.K.), Department of Nutrition (E.B.R.), Department of Biostatistics (E.T.T.), and Department of Epidemiology (E.B.R.), Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA; Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California, San Francisco (M.G., S.W.); and Department of Preventive Medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL (M.C.).
Circ Res. 2017 Jun 9;120(12):1927-1937. doi: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.116.309443. Epub 2017 Apr 3.
Higher social integration is associated with lower cardiovascular mortality; however, whether it is associated with incident coronary heart disease (CHD), especially in women, and whether associations differ by case fatality are unclear.
This study sought to examine the associations between social integration and risk of incident CHD in a large female prospective cohort.
Seventy-six thousand three hundred and sixty-two women in the Nurses' Health Study, free of CHD and stroke at baseline (1992), were followed until 2014. Social integration was assessed by a simplified Berkman-Syme Social Network Index every 4 years. End points included nonfatal myocardial infarction and fatal CHD. Two thousand three hundred and seventy-two incident CHD events occurred throughout follow-up. Adjusting for demographic, health/medical risk factors, and depressive symptoms, being socially integrated was significantly associated with lower CHD risk, particularly fatal CHD. The most socially integrated women had a hazard ratio of 0.55 (95% confidence interval, 0.41-0.73) of developing fatal CHD compared with those least socially integrated ( for trend <0.0001). When additionally adjusting for lifestyle behaviors, findings for fatal CHD were maintained but attenuated ( for trend =0.02), whereas the significant associations no longer remained for nonfatal myocardial infarction. The inverse associations between social integration and nonfatal myocardial infarction risk were largely explained by health-promoting behaviors, particularly through differences in cigarette smoking; however, the association with fatal CHD risk remained after accounting for these behaviors and, thus, may involve more direct biological mechanisms.
Social integration is inversely associated with CHD incidence in women, but is largely explained by lifestyle/behavioral pathways.
更高的社会融合度与更低的心血管疾病死亡率相关;然而,社会融合度是否与冠心病(CHD)的发病相关,尤其是在女性中,以及这种关联是否因病死率而异尚不清楚。
本研究旨在探讨在一个大型女性前瞻性队列中社会融合度与冠心病发病风险之间的关联。
护士健康研究中的76362名女性,在基线时(1992年)无冠心病和中风,随访至2014年。每4年通过简化的伯克曼-赛姆社会网络指数评估社会融合度。终点包括非致死性心肌梗死和致死性冠心病。在整个随访期间共发生2372例冠心病事件。在调整了人口统计学、健康/医学风险因素和抑郁症状后,社会融合与较低的冠心病风险显著相关,尤其是致死性冠心病。与社会融合度最低的女性相比,社会融合度最高的女性发生致死性冠心病的风险比为0.55(95%置信区间,0.41 - 0.73)(趋势P<0.0001)。当进一步调整生活方式行为时,致死性冠心病的研究结果得以维持但有所减弱(趋势P = 0.02),而非致死性心肌梗死不再有显著关联。社会融合度与非致死性心肌梗死风险之间的负相关在很大程度上可由促进健康的行为解释,尤其是通过吸烟差异;然而,在考虑这些行为后,与致死性冠心病风险的关联仍然存在,因此可能涉及更直接的生物学机制。
社会融合度与女性冠心病发病率呈负相关,但在很大程度上可由生活方式/行为途径解释。