Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Corporate Member of Freie Universität Berlin, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, and Berlin Institute of Health (BIH), Institute for Medical Psychology, 10117 Berlin, Germany; German Centre for Integration and Migration Research (DeZIM), Berlin, Germany.
Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Corporate Member of Freie Universität Berlin, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, and Berlin Institute of Health (BIH), Institute for Medical Psychology, 10117 Berlin, Germany; Development, Health and Disease Research Program, University of California, Irvine, 837 Health Sciences Drive, Irvine, CA 92697, United States.
Brain Behav Immun. 2020 Aug;88:711-717. doi: 10.1016/j.bbi.2020.05.023. Epub 2020 May 7.
The association of socioeconomic status (SES) with health and disease risk is well established. Low-grade inflammation represents a key pathway believed to underlie this association. Previous research has suggested that subjective social standing (SSS) is more consistently associated with health outcomes than objective measures of SES such as income and education. Given the importance of maternal inflammatory state in a wide array of pregnancy, birth and fetal/child developmental and health outcomes, we examine here the independent association of maternal SSS relative to objective SES with pro-inflammatory state during pregnancy.
We conducted a longitudinal study of an ethnically diverse sample of 250 pregnant women with 3 study visits in early, mid and late gestation. We obtained objective measures of SES (income, education), and SSS with reference to the community and to the nation using the MacArthur Scale of Subjective Social Status. At each study visit, a composite maternal pro-inflammatory score was derived from circulating levels of inflammatory markers (IL-6, CRP, TNF-α).
In hierarchical linear models, SSS but not objective SES was significantly and negatively associated with maternal inflammatory state. Moreover, the relationship between SSS and inflammatory state remained significant after accounting for objective SES. SSS with reference to the community was a stronger predictor of inflammatory state than SSS with reference to the nation.
Our finding adds to the scientific literature on SSS and health, highlights the importance of including SSS measures in this context, and supports future research on the relative role and biological pathways by which SSS may impact pregnancy, birth and fetal/child development and health.
社会经济地位(SES)与健康和疾病风险之间的关联已得到充分证实。低度炎症代表了一个关键途径,据信这是这种关联的基础。先前的研究表明,主观社会地位(SSS)与健康结果的相关性比收入和教育等 SES 的客观衡量标准更为一致。鉴于母体炎症状态在广泛的妊娠、分娩和胎儿/儿童发育和健康结果中的重要性,我们在此研究了母体 SSS 相对于 SES 对怀孕期间促炎状态的独立关联。
我们对 250 名不同种族的孕妇进行了一项纵向研究,在妊娠早期、中期和晚期进行了 3 次研究访问。我们使用麦克阿瑟主观社会地位量表,获得了 SES(收入、教育)的客观衡量标准和社区与国家的 SSS。在每次研究访问时,从循环炎症标志物(IL-6、CRP、TNF-α)水平中得出母体促炎评分的综合评分。
在分层线性模型中,SSS 而不是 SES 与母体炎症状态呈显著负相关。此外,在考虑到 SES 后,SSS 与炎症状态的关系仍然显著。与社区相比,SSS 是炎症状态的更强预测指标,而与国家相比,SSS 则较弱。
我们的发现增加了关于 SSS 和健康的科学文献,强调了在这种情况下纳入 SSS 措施的重要性,并支持未来关于 SSS 可能通过哪些相对作用和生物学途径影响妊娠、分娩和胎儿/儿童发育和健康的研究。