Department of Anthropology, University of Illinois Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Center of Excellence in Maternal and Child Health, Division of Community Health Sciences, University of Illinois Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Am J Hum Biol. 2024 Nov;36(11):e24161. doi: 10.1002/ajhb.24161. Epub 2024 Oct 8.
Maternal socioeconomic status (SES) is an important predictor of adverse birth outcomes and postnatal health across global populations. Chronic inflammation is implicated in cardiometabolic disease risk in high-income contexts and is a potential pathway linking maternal adversity to offspring health trajectories. To clarify how socioeconomic inequality shapes pregnancy inflammation in middle-income settings, we investigated SES as a predictor of inflammatory cytokines in late gestation in a sample from the Cebu Longitudinal Health Nutrition Survey in Cebu, Philippines.
We used multiple regression to evaluate maternal SES, reflected in household assets, as a predictor of general inflammation (C-reactive protein), inflammatory cytokines (interleukin-6, interleukin-10), and inflammatory balance (n = 407). Inflammatory markers were measured at 29.9 weeks gestation in dried blood spots, and a measure reflecting relative balance of IL6 and IL10 was calculated to capture pro- versus anti-inflammatory skewed immune profiles.
Greater household assets significantly predicted lower IL6 concentration (p < 0.001), with a trend toward lower IL6 relative to IL10 (p = 0.084). C-reactive protein and IL10 were not individually related to SES.
The inverse relationship between SES and pregnancy inflammation in Cebu is consistent with results from high-income settings. These findings further highlight the influence of socioeconomic conditions on immune regulation during pregnancy. Given the evidence that gestational inflammation impacts offspring fetal growth, our results suggest that social and economic effects on immune function may be an important pathway for the intergenerational transmission of health disparities.
孕产妇社会经济地位(SES)是全球人口不良出生结局和产后健康的重要预测因素。慢性炎症与高收入环境中心血管代谢疾病风险有关,并且是将母体逆境与后代健康轨迹联系起来的潜在途径。为了阐明社会经济不平等如何塑造中高收入人群妊娠期间的炎症,我们在菲律宾宿务的宿务纵向健康营养调查中研究了 SES 作为晚期妊娠炎症细胞因子的预测因子。
我们使用多元回归来评估家庭资产所反映的孕产妇 SES 作为一般炎症(C 反应蛋白)、炎症细胞因子(白细胞介素 6、白细胞介素 10)和炎症平衡的预测因子(n=407)。在妊娠 29.9 周时,通过干血斑测量炎症标志物,并计算反映 IL6 和 IL10 相对平衡的指标,以捕捉促炎与抗炎免疫偏倚的特征。
更多的家庭资产显著预测 IL6 浓度降低(p<0.001),IL6 相对于 IL10 的趋势降低(p=0.084)。C 反应蛋白和 IL10 与 SES 均无单独关系。
宿务 SES 与妊娠炎症之间的反比关系与高收入环境的结果一致。这些发现进一步强调了社会经济条件对妊娠期间免疫调节的影响。鉴于妊娠期炎症对后代胎儿生长的影响,我们的研究结果表明,社会和经济对免疫功能的影响可能是健康差异代际传递的一个重要途径。