University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill NC.
now with University of California, San Diego La Jolla CA.
J Am Heart Assoc. 2022 Mar;11(5):e022907. doi: 10.1161/JAHA.120.022907. Epub 2022 Feb 22.
Background The association of social isolation or lack of social network ties in older adults is unknown. This knowledge gap is important since the risk of heart failure (HF) and social isolation increase with age. The study examines whether social isolation is associated with incident HF in older women, and examines depressive symptoms as a potential mediator and age and race and ethnicity as effect modifiers. Methods and Results This study included 44 174 postmenopausal women of diverse race and ethnicity from the WHI (Women's Health Initiative) study who underwent annual assessment for HF adjudication from baseline enrollment (1993-1998) through 2018. We conducted a mediation analysis to examine depressive symptoms as a potential mediator and further examined effect modification by age and race and ethnicity. Incident HF requiring hospitalization was the main outcome. Social isolation was a composite variable based on marital/partner status, religious ties, and community ties. Depressive symptoms were assessed using CES-D (Center for Epidemiology Studies-Depression). Over a median follow-up of 15.0 years, we analyzed data from 36 457 women, and 2364 (6.5%) incident HF cases occurred; 2510 (6.9%) participants were socially isolated. In multivariable analyses adjusted for sociodemographic, behavioral, clinical, and general health/functioning; socially isolated women had a higher risk of incident HF than nonisolated women (HR, 1.23; 95% CI, 1.08-1.41). Adding depressive symptoms in the model did not change this association (HR, 1.22; 95% CI, 1.07-1.40). Neither race and ethnicity nor age moderated the association between social isolation and incident HF. Conclusions Socially isolated older women are at increased risk for developing HF, independent of traditional HF risk factors. Registration URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT00000611.
老年人社会隔离或缺乏社交网络联系的关联尚不清楚。由于心力衰竭(HF)风险和社会隔离随着年龄的增长而增加,因此这一知识空白非常重要。本研究旨在探讨社会隔离是否与老年女性发生 HF 有关,并探讨抑郁症状是否为潜在的中介因素,年龄、种族和民族是否为调节因素。
本研究纳入了来自 WHI(妇女健康倡议)研究的 44174 名不同种族和民族的绝经后妇女,这些妇女在基线入组(1993-1998 年)至 2018 年期间每年接受 HF 判定评估。我们进行了中介分析,以探讨抑郁症状是否为潜在的中介因素,并进一步探讨年龄、种族和民族的调节作用。主要结局为需要住院治疗的 HF 事件。社会隔离是一个基于婚姻/伴侣状况、宗教关系和社区关系的综合变量。抑郁症状使用 CES-D(流行病学研究中心抑郁量表)评估。在中位数为 15.0 年的随访期间,我们分析了 36457 名妇女的数据,发生了 2364 例(6.5%)HF 事件;2510 名(6.9%)参与者存在社会隔离。在调整了社会人口统计学、行为、临床和一般健康/功能的多变量分析中,与非孤立的女性相比,孤立的女性发生 HF 的风险更高(HR,1.23;95%CI,1.08-1.41)。在模型中加入抑郁症状并没有改变这种关联(HR,1.22;95%CI,1.07-1.40)。种族和民族以及年龄都没有调节社会隔离与 HF 事件之间的关联。
与传统的 HF 危险因素无关,社会隔离的老年女性发生 HF 的风险增加。