Bayram Ece, Wyman-Chick Kathryn A, Costello Reilly, Ghodsi Hamidreza, Rivera Charlotte S, Solomon Lisa, Kane Joseph P M, Litvan Irene
Department of Neurosciences, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California, USA.
Department of Neurology, University of Colorado Anschutz, Aurora, Colorado, USA.
Neurodegener Dis. 2025 Feb 18;25(1):1-13. doi: 10.1159/000544772.
Multiple studies report sex and gender differences in Lewy body dementia (LBD); however, there is a paucity of research investigating social determinants associated with LBD.
Participants with LBD (51 females, 79 males) and controls with similar age (64 females, 60 males) completed remote surveys assessing various social and demographic variables, and age at LBD onset for LBD group. Sex-stratified comparisons for LBD and control groups, and comparisons of females and males with LBD were done for social determinants. Sex differences for onset age were further analyzed with linear models adjusting for significantly differing social variables between the sexes.
LBD group had lower years of education, income, subjective social status than controls, with larger differences for males than females (p < 0.05 for all). Higher percentage of females with LBD was living alone (p = 0.016) and not married/partnered (p = 0.002) compared to males with LBD. Adjusting for social variables that differed between the sexes, females were younger at cognitive impairment onset (p = 0.037) and diagnosis (p = 0.032). For the overall cohort, being ethnoracial minoritized, sexual and gender minoritized, and having lower education quality were associated with younger age at symptom onset (p < 0.049 for all). For females, lower childhood subjective social status (p = 0.037), and for males, being ethnoracial minoritized (p < 0.001) and lower years of education (p = 0.031) were associated with younger age at diagnosis.
Social determinants, even during childhood, can impact the LBD onset differently for females and males. Interactions between biological and social factors need to be investigated further with inclusive and diverse cohorts in LBD.
多项研究报告了路易体痴呆(LBD)中的性别差异;然而,针对与LBD相关的社会决定因素的研究却很少。
LBD患者(51名女性,79名男性)和年龄相仿的对照组(64名女性,60名男性)完成了远程调查,评估各种社会和人口统计学变量,以及LBD组的LBD发病年龄。对LBD组和对照组进行性别分层比较,并对LBD女性和男性进行社会决定因素比较。使用线性模型进一步分析发病年龄的性别差异,并对性别之间显著不同的社会变量进行调整。
LBD组的受教育年限、收入、主观社会地位低于对照组,男性的差异大于女性(所有p<0.05)。与患有LBD的男性相比,患有LBD的女性独居比例更高(p = 0.016),未婚/无伴侣比例更高(p = 0.002)。对性别之间不同的社会变量进行调整后,女性认知障碍发病时(p = 0.037)和诊断时(p = 0.032)年龄更小。对于整个队列,属于少数族裔、性取向和性别少数群体以及教育质量较低与症状出现时年龄较小有关(所有p<0.049)。对于女性,童年时期主观社会地位较低(p = 0.037),对于男性,属于少数族裔(p<0.001)和受教育年限较低(p = 0.031)与诊断时年龄较小有关。
社会决定因素,即使在童年时期,对女性和男性LBD发病的影响也有所不同。需要在包容性和多样化的LBD队列中进一步研究生物因素和社会因素之间的相互作用。