Department of Non-Communicable Disease Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom.
Department of Non-Communicable Disease Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom; Department of Population Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom.
Am J Prev Med. 2021 Nov;61(5):e251-e266. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2021.04.027. Epub 2021 Jul 14.
Socioeconomic disadvantage in childhood is strongly associated with a higher risk of cardiovascular disease in high-income countries. However, the association in low- and middle-income countries, where childhood poverty remains prevalent, has not been reviewed.
The authors systematically searched Embase, MEDLINE, and Global Health databases for articles on the association between childhood socioeconomic position and risk of cardiovascular disease in adulthood in low- and middle-income countries until September 2020. Outcomes included measures of cardiovascular disease, its subclinical markers (e.g., carotid intima-media thickness), and its major risk factors (e.g., hypertension, dyslipidemia, diabetes). Where available, associations were extracted before and after adjustment for socioeconomic position in adulthood. Results were synthesized qualitatively by outcome. The study protocol is registered on PROSPERO (CRD42018086984).
The search returned 3,568 unique abstracts, from which 29 eligible articles from 14 middle-income countries were identified, representing >150,000 participants. The most commonly reported outcomes were cardiovascular risk factors; very few studies reported prevalent measures of cardiovascular disease, and no studies reported cardiovascular disease incidence or mortality. Of the 46 reported associations between childhood socioeconomic position and risk of cardiovascular disease, 8 were inverse, 0 were positive, and 38 showed no clear evidence of association. All articles had high (16/29) or medium (13/29) risk of bias.
Current evidence from middle-income countries provides little support for an association between childhood socioeconomic position and risk of cardiovascular disease, and evidence from low-income countries is lacking. It would be premature to consider childhood poverty as a target for cardiovascular disease prevention in these settings.
在高收入国家,儿童时期的社会经济劣势与心血管疾病风险增加密切相关。然而,在儿童贫困仍然普遍存在的中低收入国家,这一关联尚未得到审查。
作者系统地检索了 Embase、MEDLINE 和全球卫生数据库,以获取有关中低收入国家儿童社会经济地位与成年后心血管疾病风险之间关联的文章,检索时间截至 2020 年 9 月。研究结果包括心血管疾病的测量指标、其亚临床标志物(如颈动脉内膜中层厚度)以及主要危险因素(如高血压、血脂异常、糖尿病)。在可用的情况下,在调整成年后的社会经济地位后提取关联。结果按研究结果进行定性综合。该研究方案已在 PROSPERO(CRD42018086984)上注册。
检索共返回 3568 篇摘要,从中确定了来自 14 个中等收入国家的 29 篇符合条件的文章,代表了超过 150000 名参与者。报告的最常见结果是心血管危险因素;很少有研究报告心血管疾病的流行测量指标,也没有研究报告心血管疾病的发病率或死亡率。在 46 项报告的儿童社会经济地位与心血管疾病风险之间的关联中,有 8 项是负相关,0 项是正相关,38 项没有明确的关联证据。所有文章的偏倚风险都很高(29 篇中有 16 篇)或中等(29 篇中有 13 篇)。
来自中等收入国家的现有证据几乎没有支持儿童社会经济地位与心血管疾病风险之间存在关联的证据,而来自低收入国家的证据则缺乏。在这些环境中,将儿童贫困视为心血管疾病预防的目标还为时过早。