Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland.
Section of Pulmonary and Critical Care, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Geisel School of Medicine, Hanover, New Hampshire.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2021 Apr 15;203(8):987-997. doi: 10.1164/rccm.202002-0253OC.
Black adults have worse health outcomes compared with white adults in certain chronic diseases, including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). To determine to what degree disadvantage by individual and neighborhood socioeconomic status (SES) may contribute to racial disparities in COPD outcomes. Individual and neighborhood-scale sociodemographic characteristics were determined in 2,649 current or former adult smokers with and without COPD at recruitment into SPIROMICS (Subpopulations and Intermediate Outcome Measures in COPD Study). We assessed whether racial differences in symptom, functional, and imaging outcomes (St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire, COPD Assessment Test score, modified Medical Research Council dyspnea scale, 6-minute-walk test distance, and computed tomography [CT] scan metrics) and severe exacerbation risk were explained by individual or neighborhood SES. Using generalized linear mixed model regression, we compared respiratory outcomes by race, adjusting for confounders and individual-level and neighborhood-level descriptors of SES both separately and sequentially. After adjusting for COPD risk factors, Black participants had significantly worse respiratory symptoms and quality of life (modified Medical Research Council scale, COPD Assessment Test, and St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire), higher risk of severe exacerbations and higher percentage of emphysema, thicker airways (internal perimeter of 10 mm), and more air trapping on CT metrics compared with white participants. In addition, the association between Black race and respiratory outcomes was attenuated but remained statistically significant after adjusting for individual-level SES, which explained up to 12-35% of racial disparities. Further adjustment showed that neighborhood-level SES explained another 26-54% of the racial disparities in respiratory outcomes. Even after accounting for both individual and neighborhood SES factors, Black individuals continued to have increased severe exacerbation risk and persistently worse CT outcomes (emphysema, air trapping, and airway wall thickness). Disadvantages by individual- and neighborhood-level SES each partly explain disparities in respiratory outcomes between Black individuals and white individuals. Strategies to narrow the gap in SES disadvantages may help to reduce race-related health disparities in COPD; however, further work is needed to identify additional risk factors contributing to persistent disparities.
黑人成年人在某些慢性疾病中的健康状况比白人成年人差,包括慢性阻塞性肺疾病(COPD)。为了确定个体和社区社会经济地位(SES)的劣势在多大程度上导致 COPD 结局的种族差异。在 SPIROMICS(COPD 研究中的亚人群和中间结局测量)中,在招募时确定了 2649 名当前或前成年吸烟者是否患有 COPD 及其个体和社区规模的社会人口统计学特征。我们评估了种族差异在症状、功能和影像学结果(圣乔治呼吸问卷、COPD 评估测试评分、改良医学研究委员会呼吸困难量表、6 分钟步行试验距离和计算机断层扫描[CT]扫描指标)和严重加重风险是否可以通过个体或社区 SES 来解释。使用广义线性混合模型回归,我们比较了种族间的呼吸结果,在分别和依次调整 COPD 危险因素、个体水平和社区水平 SES 描述符后进行调整。在调整 COPD 危险因素后,与白人参与者相比,黑人参与者的呼吸症状和生活质量(改良医学研究委员会量表、COPD 评估测试和圣乔治呼吸问卷)明显更差,严重加重风险更高,肺气肿百分比更高,气道更厚(10mm 内周长),CT 指标上空气滞留更多。此外,在调整个体 SES 后,黑种人种族与呼吸结局之间的关联减弱,但仍具有统计学意义,个体 SES 解释了种族差异的 12-35%。进一步的调整表明,社区 SES 解释了呼吸结局中种族差异的另外 26-54%。即使考虑到个体和社区 SES 因素,黑人个体仍有更高的严重加重风险和持续更差的 CT 结果(肺气肿、空气滞留和气道壁增厚)。个体和社区 SES 的劣势分别部分解释了黑人和白人个体之间呼吸结局的差异。缩小 SES 劣势差距的策略可能有助于减少 COPD 中与种族相关的健康差异;然而,还需要进一步努力确定导致持续差异的其他危险因素。