Buie Joy, McMillan Emma, Kirby Jillian, Cardenas Leigh Ann, Eftekhari Sanaz, Feldman Candace H, Gawuga Cyrena, Knight Andrea M, Lim S Sam, McCalla Sheryl, McClamb Daria, Polk Barbara, Williams Edith, Yelin Ed, Shah Sanoja, Costenbader Karen H
Lupus Foundation of American, Washington, DC.
Charles River Associates, San Francisco, California.
ACR Open Rheumatol. 2023 Sep;5(9):454-464. doi: 10.1002/acr2.11590. Epub 2023 Aug 2.
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a chronic autoimmune disease. The complex relationships between race and ethnicity and social determinants of health (SDOH) in influencing SLE and its course are increasingly appreciated. Multiple SDOH have been strongly associated with lupus incidence and outcomes and contribute to health disparities in lupus. Measures of socioeconomic status, including economic instability, poverty, unemployment, and food insecurity, as well as features of the neighborhood and built environment, including lack of safe and affordable housing, crime, stress, racial segregation, and discrimination, are associated with race and ethnicity in the US and are risk factors for poor outcomes in lupus. In this scientific statement, we aimed to summarize current evidence on the role of SDOH in relation to racial and ethnic disparities in SLE and SLE outcomes, primarily as experienced in the U.S. Lupus Foundation of America's Health Disparities Advisory Panel, comprising 10 health disparity experts, including academic researchers and patients, who met 12 times over the course of 18 months in assembling and reviewing the data for this study. Sources included articles published from 2011 to 2023 in PubMed, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data, and bibliographies and recommendations. Search terms included lupus, race, ethnicity, and SDOH domains. Data were extracted and synthesized into this scientific statement. Poorer neighborhoods correlate with increased damage, reduced care, and stress-induced lupus flares. Large disparities in health care affordability, accessibility, and acceptability exist in the US, varying by region, insurance status, and racial and minority groups. Preliminary interventions targeted social support, depression, and shared-decision-making, but more research and intervention implementation and evaluation are needed. Disparities in lupus across racial and ethnic groups in the US are driven by SDOH, some of which are more easily remediable than others. A multidimensional and multidisciplinary approach involving various stakeholder groups is needed to address these complex challenges, address these diminish disparities, and improve outcomes.
系统性红斑狼疮(SLE)是一种慢性自身免疫性疾病。种族与族裔以及健康的社会决定因素(SDOH)在影响SLE及其病程方面的复杂关系日益受到重视。多种SDOH与狼疮的发病率和预后密切相关,并导致狼疮患者的健康差异。社会经济地位指标,包括经济不稳定、贫困、失业和粮食不安全,以及邻里和建筑环境特征,包括缺乏安全且负担得起的住房、犯罪、压力、种族隔离和歧视,在美国与种族和族裔相关,并且是狼疮不良预后的危险因素。在本科学声明中,我们旨在总结当前关于SDOH在SLE种族和族裔差异以及SLE预后方面作用的证据,主要是在美国狼疮基金会健康差异咨询小组所经历的情况。该小组由10名健康差异专家组成,包括学术研究人员和患者,他们在18个月内召开了12次会议,收集和审查本研究的数据。资料来源包括2011年至2023年发表在PubMed上的文章、疾病控制与预防中心的数据以及参考文献和建议。检索词包括狼疮、种族、族裔和SDOH领域。数据被提取并综合成本科学声明。较差的社区与损伤增加、治疗减少以及压力诱发的狼疮发作相关。在美国,医疗保健的可负担性、可及性和可接受性存在很大差异,因地区、保险状况以及种族和少数群体而异。初步干预措施针对社会支持、抑郁症和共同决策,但仍需要更多的研究以及干预措施的实施和评估。美国不同种族和族裔群体之间的狼疮差异是由SDOH驱动的,其中一些比其他因素更容易得到改善。需要一种涉及各种利益相关者群体的多维度、多学科方法来应对这些复杂挑战,减少这些差异,并改善预后。