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非裔美国女性社会因素、表观基因组学和狼疮(SELA)研究:一项观察性机制研究的方案,该研究旨在探讨在健康差异人群中,多个个体和社会因素对狼疮结局的相互作用。

Social Factors, Epigenomics and Lupus in African American Women (SELA) Study: protocol for an observational mechanistic study examining the interplay of multiple individual and social factors on lupus outcomes in a health disparity population.

机构信息

Department of Medicine, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina, USA.

Department of Biostatistics and Data Science, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, USA.

出版信息

Lupus Sci Med. 2022 Jun;9(1). doi: 10.1136/lupus-2022-000698.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

Despite the disproportional impact of SLE on historically marginalised communities, the individual and sociocultural factors underlying these health disparities remain elusive. We report the design and methods for a study aimed at identifying epigenetic biomarkers associated with racism and resiliency that affect gene function and thereby influence SLE in a health disparity population.

METHODS AND ANALYSIS

The Social Factors, Epigenomics and Lupus in African American Women (SELA) Study is a cross-sectional, case-control study. A total of 600 self-reported African American women will be invited to participate. All participants will respond to questionnaires that capture detailed sociodemographic and medical history, validated measures of racial discrimination, social support, as well as disease activity and damage for cases. Participants who wish will receive their genetic ancestry estimates and be involved in research. Blood samples are required to provide peripheral blood mononuclear cell counts, DNA and RNA. The primary goals of SELA are to identify variation in DNA methylation (DNAm) associated with self-reported exposure to racial discrimination and social support, to evaluate whether social DNAm sites affect gene expression, to identify the synergistic effects of social factors on DNAm changes on SLE and to develop a social factors-DNAm predictive model for disease outcomes. This study is conducted in cooperation with the Sea Island Families Project Citizen Advisory Committee.

DISCUSSION AND DISSEMINATION

SELA will respond to the pressing need to clarify the interplay and regulatory mechanism by which various positive and negative social exposures influence SLE. Results will be published and shared with patients and the community. Knowledge of the biological impact of social exposures on SLE, as informed by the results of this study, can be leveraged by advocacy efforts to develop psychosocial interventions that prevent or mitigate risk exposures, and services or interventions that promote positive exposures. Implementation of such interventions is paramount to the closure of the health disparities gap.

摘要

简介

尽管系统性红斑狼疮(SLE)对历史上处于边缘地位的社区造成了不成比例的影响,但导致这些健康差异的个体和社会文化因素仍难以捉摸。我们报告了一项研究的设计和方法,该研究旨在确定与种族主义和韧性相关的表观遗传生物标志物,这些标志物影响基因功能,从而影响健康差异人群中的 SLE。

方法和分析

社会因素、表观基因组学和非裔美国女性狼疮(SELA)研究是一项横断面、病例对照研究。总共将邀请 600 名自我报告的非裔美国女性参加。所有参与者将回答问卷,这些问卷涵盖详细的社会人口统计学和病史、种族歧视的验证性衡量标准、社会支持,以及病例的疾病活动和损伤。希望的参与者将获得他们的遗传祖先估计,并参与研究。需要采集血液样本以提供外周血单核细胞计数、DNA 和 RNA。SELA 的主要目标是确定与自我报告的种族歧视和社会支持暴露相关的 DNA 甲基化(DNAm)变异,评估社会 DNAm 位点是否影响基因表达,确定社会因素对 SLE 中 DNAm 变化的协同作用,并开发一种用于疾病结果的社会因素-DNAm 预测模型。这项研究是与海岛家族项目公民咨询委员会合作进行的。

讨论和传播

SELA 将回应澄清各种积极和消极的社会暴露如何影响 SLE 的相互作用和调节机制的紧迫需求。结果将发表并与患者和社区分享。这项研究的结果可以为倡导努力提供信息,以开发预防或减轻风险暴露的心理社会干预措施,以及促进积极暴露的服务或干预措施,从而利用社会暴露对 SLE 的生物学影响。实施这些干预措施对于缩小健康差异差距至关重要。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/9500/9244713/2c0478e4d15b/lupus-2022-000698f01.jpg

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