From the Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences (Trudel-Fitzgerald, Kawachi, Kubzansky), Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts; Channing Division of Network Medicine, Department of Medicine (Poole, Okereke), Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts; Department of Gynecologic Oncology and Reproductive Medicine, Division of Surgery (Sood), The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas; Department of Epidemiology (Okereke, Tworoger), Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts; Department of Psychiatry (Okereke), Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts; and Department of Cancer Epidemiology (Tworoger), Moffitt Cancer Center, Tampa, Florida.
Psychosom Med. 2019 Nov/Dec;81(9):833-840. doi: 10.1097/PSY.0000000000000747.
Low social integration and divorce/widowhood are chronic psychosocial stressors that may affect health. When assessed after cancer diagnosis, they have been associated with poorer survival, but their role in cancer development, particularly ovarian cancer (OvCA), is less understood. We investigated whether social integration and marital status were related to OvCA risk in a large population-based study.
Women from the Nurses' Health Study completed the Berkman-Syme Social Network Index and reported their marital status every 4 years starting in 1992 (N = 72,206), and were followed up until 2012 (20-year follow-up period). Multivariate Cox regression models estimated hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) of OvCA risk, considering relevant potential confounders, in lagged analyses whereby psychosocial indicators were assessed 4 to 8 years (n = 436 cases) and 8 to 12 years (n = 306 cases) before diagnosis to account for the effects of prediagnostic symptoms on social measures. Secondary analyses evaluated the stability of and cumulative exposure to these social factors on OvCA risk.
Being socially isolated versus integrated was related to an increased OvCA risk 8 to 12 years later (HR = 1.51, 95% CI = 1.07-2.13), but not 4 to 8 years later. Compared with married women, OvCA risk was significantly higher in widowed but not in separated/divorced individuals, with both time periods (e.g., 8-12 years later: HRwidowed = 1.57 [95% CI = 1.15-2.14] versus HRseparated/divorced = 1.13 [95% CI = 0.74-1.72]). Estimates were comparable or stronger when investigating stability in and cumulative effects of social indicators.
Results suggest higher OvCA risk among socially isolated and widowed women, particularly when such psychosocial stressors were experienced a decade before diagnosis or were sustained over time.
社会融合程度低和离婚/丧偶是慢性心理社会压力源,可能会影响健康。在癌症诊断后评估时,它们与较差的生存有关,但它们在癌症发展中的作用,特别是卵巢癌(OvCA),知之甚少。我们在一项大型基于人群的研究中调查了社会融合和婚姻状况是否与 OvCA 风险相关。
1992 年开始,护士健康研究中的女性完成了 Berkman-Syme 社会网络指数,并每 4 年报告一次婚姻状况(N=72206),并随访至 2012 年(20 年随访期)。多变量 Cox 回归模型估计了 OvCA 风险的风险比(HR)和 95%置信区间(CI),考虑了相关的潜在混杂因素,滞后分析中,心理社会指标在诊断前 4 至 8 年(n=436 例)和 8 至 12 年(n=306 例)进行评估,以说明预诊断症状对社会措施的影响。二次分析评估了这些社会因素对 OvCA 风险的稳定性和累积暴露。
与社会融合的女性相比,孤立的女性 OvCA 风险在 8 至 12 年后增加(HR=1.51,95%CI=1.07-2.13),但在 4 至 8 年后没有增加。与已婚女性相比,丧偶女性 OvCA 风险明显更高,但离婚/分居女性则不然,两个时间段均如此(例如,8-12 年后:HRwidowed=1.57[95%CI=1.15-2.14],与 HRseparated/divorced=1.13[95%CI=0.74-1.72])。当调查社会指标的稳定性和累积效应时,估计值相当或更强。
结果表明,社会孤立和丧偶女性 OvCA 风险较高,尤其是当这些心理社会压力源在诊断前十年出现或持续存在时。