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医疗保险预测因素对阿尔茨海默病风险健康差异的影响。

Effects of Medicare predictors in health disparities in the risk of Alzheimer's disease.

作者信息

Akushevich Igor, Yashkin Arseniy, Kravchenko Julia

机构信息

Biodemography of Aging Research Unit Social Science Research Institute Duke University Durham North Carolina USA.

Department of Surgery Duke University School of Medicine Durham North Carolina USA.

出版信息

Alzheimers Dement (N Y). 2025 Apr 9;11(2):e70078. doi: 10.1002/trc2.70078. eCollection 2025 Apr-Jun.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

Disparities in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and related dementias (ADRD) persist across race/ethnicity, sex, and US geographic regions, but limited quantitative information exists to explain how specific predictors contribute to these disparities. Many traditional methods lack precision in addressing both exposure (higher prevalence of a predictor) and vulnerability (higher risk associated with a predictor) effects. This study introduces an approach that leverages population attributable fraction (PAF) to analyze and explain AD/ADRD disparities using Medicare data.

METHODS

We applied our method to Medicare claims data from a nationally representative sample of the US adults aged 70, 75, 80, and 85. The analysis focused on six types of disparities: Black-White, Hispanic-White, Native American-White, Asian-White, female-male, and stroke-belt versus non-stroke-belt states. Predictors included Medicare/Medicaid dual eligibility as an indicator of low income and 10 AD/ADRD-related diseases. The method quantified the exposure and vulnerability effects of each predictor on the observed disparities.

RESULTS

Low income and vulnerability to arterial hypertension were the primary contributors to AD/ADRD disparities, with cerebrovascular diseases and depression as notable secondary predictors. The exposure effect dominated for income-related disparities, while hypertension's effect was largely driven by increased vulnerability. Racial disparities (Black-White, Hispanic-White) were most affected by income and hypertension, while female-male and stroke-belt disparities were less influenced by the examined predictors.

DISCUSSION

Our findings indicate that different intervention strategies are needed to address AD/ADRD disparities. Income-related disparities require targeting exposure (e.g., socioeconomic improvements), while hypertension-related disparities suggest a focus on managing vulnerability (e.g., better control of hypertension). The developed approach offers a robust framework for explaining disparities and designing targeted interventions. Further application to other datasets and exploration of additional predictors could enhance understanding and lead to more effective prevention strategies for AD/ADRD disparities.

HIGHLIGHTS

Our new approach addresses disparities leveraging the concept of population attributable fraction for Cox models.Exposure and vulnerability mechanisms of health disparity generation are evaluated.Vulnerability to hypertension is a consistent dominant factor in Alzheimer's disease (AD) risk disparities.Predictors explain AD disparities better in Black and Hispanic populations.Disparities in AD are driven by exposure to socioeconomic status suggesting targeted interventions.

摘要

引言

阿尔茨海默病(AD)及相关痴呆症(ADRD)在种族/族裔、性别和美国地理区域间的差异持续存在,但用于解释特定预测因素如何导致这些差异的定量信息有限。许多传统方法在处理暴露(预测因素的较高患病率)和易感性(与预测因素相关的较高风险)影响方面缺乏精确性。本研究引入一种利用人群归因分数(PAF)来分析和解释AD/ADRD差异的方法,使用医疗保险数据。

方法

我们将我们的方法应用于来自美国70岁、75岁、80岁和85岁成年人全国代表性样本的医疗保险理赔数据。分析聚焦于六种差异类型:黑人-白人、西班牙裔-白人、美国原住民-白人、亚裔-白人、女性-男性,以及中风带州与非中风带州。预测因素包括作为低收入指标的医疗保险/医疗补助双重资格以及10种与AD/ADRD相关的疾病。该方法量化了每个预测因素对观察到的差异的暴露和易感性影响。

结果

低收入和对动脉高血压的易感性是AD/ADRD差异的主要促成因素,脑血管疾病和抑郁症是显著的次要预测因素。与收入相关的差异中暴露效应占主导,而高血压的效应主要由易感性增加驱动。种族差异(黑人-白人、西班牙裔-白人)受收入和高血压影响最大,而女性-男性差异和中风带差异受所检查的预测因素影响较小。

讨论

我们的研究结果表明,需要不同的干预策略来解决AD/ADRD差异。与收入相关的差异需要针对暴露(例如社会经济改善),而与高血压相关的差异表明应关注管理易感性(例如更好地控制高血压)。所开发的方法为解释差异和设计有针对性的干预措施提供了一个强大的框架。进一步应用于其他数据集并探索其他预测因素可以增强理解并导致更有效的AD/ADRD差异预防策略。

要点

我们的新方法利用Cox模型的人群归因分数概念来解决差异。评估了健康差异产生的暴露和易感性机制。对高血压的易感性是阿尔茨海默病(AD)风险差异中一致的主导因素。预测因素在黑人和西班牙裔人群中对AD差异的解释更好。AD差异由社会经济地位暴露驱动,提示有针对性的干预措施。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/5984/11982180/62a6849b0949/TRC2-11-e70078-g001.jpg

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