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Decomposing the educational gradient in allostatic load across European populations. What matters the most: differentials in exposure or in susceptibility?

Authors :
Stefan Söderberg
Stefan Blankenberg
B Thorand
Blánaid Hicks
Giovanni Veronesi
Licia Iacoviello
Marco M Ferrario
Hannah Forrest
Giancarlo Cesana
Kari Kuulasmaa
Frank Kee
Luigi Palmieri
Roberto De Ponti
Hugh Tunstall-Pedoe
Susana Sans
Tanja Zeller
Martin Bobak
Augusto Di Castelnuovo
Veikko Salomaa
Source :
Veronesi, G, Kee, F, Hicks, B, Forrest, H, Tunstall-Pedoe, H, Kuulasmaa, K, Sans, S, Salomaa, V, Thorand, B, Di Castelnuovo, A, Soderberg, S, Cesana, G, Bobak, M, De Ponti, R, Iacoviello, L, Palmieri, L, Zeller, T, Blankenberg, S & Ferrario, M M 2020, ' Decomposing the educational gradient in allostatic load across European populations. What matters the most: differentials in exposure or in susceptibility? ', Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health, vol. 74, no. 12, pp. 1008-1015 . https://doi.org/10.1136/jech-2020-213946
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

BackgroundWe investigate whether socially disadvantaged individuals are more susceptible to the detrimental effects of smoking and alcohol intake on allostatic load (AL), a marker of physiological ‘wear and tear’, resulting from adaptation to chronic stress.MethodsIn a cross-sectional analysis, 27 019 men and 26 738 women aged 35–74 years were identified from 21 European cohorts in the BiomarCaRE consortium. We defined three educational classes (EDs) according to years of schooling and an AL score as the sum of z-scores of eight selected biomarkers from the cardiovascular, metabolic and inflammatory systems. We used the Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition to disentangle the ED gradient in AL score into the differential exposure (DE, attributable to different distribution of smoking and alcohol intake across EDs) and the differential susceptibility (DS, attributable to a different effect of risk factors on AL across EDs) components.ResultsLess-educated men (mean AL difference: 0.68, 95% CI 0.57 to 0.79) and women (1.52, 95% CI 1.40 to 1.64) had higher AL scores. DE accounted for 7% and 6% of the gradient in men and women, respectively. In men, combining smoking and alcohol intake, DS accounted for 42% of the gradient (smoking DS coefficient=0.177, 26% of the gradient; alcohol DS coefficient=0.109; 16%, not statistically significant). DS contribution increased to 69% in metabolic markers. DS estimates were consistent across age groups, irrespective of comorbidities and robust to unmeasured confounding. No DS was observed in women.ConclusionsIn men, a DS mechanism substantially contributes to the educational class gradient in allostatic load.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Veronesi, G, Kee, F, Hicks, B, Forrest, H, Tunstall-Pedoe, H, Kuulasmaa, K, Sans, S, Salomaa, V, Thorand, B, Di Castelnuovo, A, Soderberg, S, Cesana, G, Bobak, M, De Ponti, R, Iacoviello, L, Palmieri, L, Zeller, T, Blankenberg, S & Ferrario, M M 2020, ' Decomposing the educational gradient in allostatic load across European populations. What matters the most: differentials in exposure or in susceptibility? ', Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health, vol. 74, no. 12, pp. 1008-1015 . https://doi.org/10.1136/jech-2020-213946
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9333e0c0d8da95f35e5197780fc69c13