Barry Megan C, Zimmer Catherine, Halpern Carolyn T
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Gillings School of Global Public Health, Department of Maternal and Child Health, Chapel Hill, NC, 27599-7445, USA.
The Carolina Population Center, USA.
SSM Popul Health. 2022 Apr 16;18:101099. doi: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2022.101099. eCollection 2022 Jun.
Racial disparities in birth outcomes are seemingly intractable. Using person-centered methods and drawing from the life course and Weathering Hypothesis literatures, we used data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health to group non-Hispanic White and non-Hispanic Black women ages 24-34 into latent classes based on pre-pregnancy biomarkers of allostatic load. Stratified analyses yielded four latent classes among non-Hispanic White women, characterized by: 1) high blood pressure, 2) high body mass index and waist circumference, 3) high total cholesterol and triglycerides, and low high-density lipoprotein, and 4) low-risk, and two latent classes among non-Hispanic Black women, characterized by: 1) high body mass index and waist circumference, and moderate-risk blood pressure, hbA1c, and c-reactive protein, and 2) low-risk. Allostatic load class membership and other maternal- and infant-level covariates were then included simultaneously as predictors of three separate dichotomous outcomes: preterm birth, macrosomia, and low birth weight in multilevel logistic regression models. In a separate multilevel linear regression model, the same variables were simultaneously entered to predict continuously measured birthweight. In multilevel, multivariate models, White women in the high-risk body mass index and waist circumference class, as compared to the high-risk blood pressure class, had infants with higher birthweights. Other comparisons were not significant or not of meaningful magnitude. Prioritizing temporality so that allostatic load measurement preceded first birth likely biased the composition of the analytical sample. Additional research is needed to help medical providers and public health practitioners understand the complex biological and social mechanisms underlying inequities in birth outcomes and identify prevention strategies.
出生结局方面的种族差异似乎难以解决。我们采用以个体为中心的方法,并借鉴生命历程和“累积应激假说”文献,利用全国青少年至成人健康纵向研究的数据,根据孕期前的压力负荷生物标志物,将24至34岁的非西班牙裔白人女性和非西班牙裔黑人女性分为不同的潜在类别。分层分析在非西班牙裔白人女性中产生了四个潜在类别,其特征分别为:1)高血压;2)高体重指数和腰围;3)高总胆固醇和甘油三酯,以及低高密度脂蛋白;4)低风险。在非西班牙裔黑人女性中产生了两个潜在类别,其特征分别为:1)高体重指数和腰围,以及中度风险的血压、糖化血红蛋白和C反应蛋白;2)低风险。然后,在多水平逻辑回归模型中,将压力负荷类别成员身份以及其他产妇和婴儿层面的协变量同时作为三个独立二分结局的预测因素:早产、巨大儿和低出生体重。在一个单独的多水平线性回归模型中,同时纳入相同变量以预测连续测量的出生体重。在多水平多变量模型中,与高血压高风险类别相比,处于高风险体重指数和腰围类别的白人女性所生婴儿的出生体重更高。其他比较无显著差异或差异无实际意义。优先考虑时间顺序,使压力负荷测量先于首次生育,这可能会使分析样本的构成产生偏差。需要进一步的研究来帮助医疗服务提供者和公共卫生从业者理解出生结局不平等背后复杂的生物和社会机制,并确定预防策略。