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多病症教育不平等:因果关系和因果途径。英国生物库中的孟德尔随机化研究。

Educational inequality in multimorbidity: causality and causal pathways. A mendelian randomisation study in UK Biobank.

机构信息

MRC Integrative Epidemiology Unit, Population Health Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.

Nic Waals Institute, Lovisenberg Diaconal Hospital, Oslo, Norway.

出版信息

BMC Public Health. 2023 Aug 28;23(1):1644. doi: 10.1186/s12889-023-16369-1.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Multimorbidity, typically defined as having two or more long-term health conditions, is associated with reduced wellbeing and life expectancy. Understanding the determinants of multimorbidity, including whether they are causal, may help with the design and prioritisation of prevention interventions. This study seeks to assess the causality of education, BMI, smoking and alcohol as determinants of multimorbidity, and the degree to which BMI, smoking and alcohol mediate differences in multimorbidity by level of education.

METHODS

Participants were 181,214 females and 155,677 males, mean ages 56.7 and 57.1 years respectively, from UK Biobank. We used a Mendelian randomization design; an approach that uses genetic variants as instrumental variables to interrogate causality.

RESULTS

The prevalence of multimorbidity was 55.1%. Mendelian randomization suggests that lower education, higher BMI and higher levels of smoking causally increase the risk of multimorbidity. For example, one standard deviation (equivalent to 5.1 years) increase in genetically-predicted years of education decreases the risk of multimorbidity by 9.0% (95% CI: 6.5 to 11.4%). A 5 kg/m increase in genetically-predicted BMI increases the risk of multimorbidity by 9.2% (95% CI: 8.1 to 10.3%) and a one SD higher lifetime smoking index increases the risk of multimorbidity by 6.8% (95% CI: 3.3 to 10.4%). Evidence for a causal effect of genetically-predicted alcohol consumption on multimorbidity was less strong; an increase of 5 units of alcohol per week increases the risk of multimorbidity by 1.3% (95% CI: 0.2 to 2.5%). The proportions of the association between education and multimorbidity explained by BMI and smoking are 20.4% and 17.6% respectively. Collectively, BMI and smoking account for 31.8% of the educational inequality in multimorbidity.

CONCLUSIONS

Education, BMI, smoking and alcohol consumption are intervenable causal risk factors for multimorbidity. Furthermore, BMI and lifetime smoking make a considerable contribution to the generation of educational inequalities in multimorbidity. Public health interventions that improve population-wide levels of these risk factors are likely to reduce multimorbidity and inequalities in its occurrence.

摘要

背景

多种疾病通常定义为患有两种或两种以上的长期健康状况,与幸福感和预期寿命降低有关。了解多种疾病的决定因素,包括它们是否具有因果关系,可能有助于设计和优先考虑预防干预措施。本研究旨在评估教育、BMI、吸烟和饮酒作为多种疾病决定因素的因果关系,以及 BMI、吸烟和饮酒在多大程度上通过教育程度调节多种疾病的差异。

方法

参与者为来自英国生物库的 181214 名女性和 155677 名男性,平均年龄分别为 56.7 岁和 57.1 岁。我们使用孟德尔随机化设计;一种使用遗传变异作为工具变量来探究因果关系的方法。

结果

多种疾病的患病率为 55.1%。孟德尔随机化表明,较低的教育程度、较高的 BMI 和较高的吸烟水平会导致多种疾病的风险增加。例如,遗传预测的受教育年限增加一个标准差(相当于 5.1 年),可使多种疾病的风险降低 9.0%(95%可信区间:6.5 至 11.4%)。遗传预测 BMI 每增加 5kg/m2,多种疾病的风险增加 9.2%(95%可信区间:8.1 至 10.3%),终生吸烟指数每增加一个标准差,多种疾病的风险增加 6.8%(95%可信区间:3.3 至 10.4%)。遗传预测的饮酒量与多种疾病之间因果关系的证据则较弱;每周增加 5 个单位的酒精,多种疾病的风险增加 1.3%(95%可信区间:0.2 至 2.5%)。BMI 和吸烟对教育与多种疾病之间关联的解释比例分别为 20.4%和 17.6%。总体而言,BMI 和吸烟共占多种疾病教育不平等的 31.8%。

结论

教育、BMI、吸烟和饮酒是多种疾病的可干预因果风险因素。此外,BMI 和终生吸烟对多种疾病教育不平等的产生有很大贡献。提高这些风险因素的人群水平的公共卫生干预措施可能会降低多种疾病的发生和不平等。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/fd89/10463319/00c4fc19b534/12889_2023_16369_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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