金属混合物介导血压的社会经济梯度:在前瞻性孟加拉国农村队列中的四向分解。

Juwel Rana, Mohammad Hasan Shahriar, Syed Emdadul Haque, Samar Kumar Hore, Tariqul Islam, Golam Sarwar, Muhammad Yunus, Maria Argos, Habibul Ahsan, Jay S Kaufman
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在低收入和中等收入国家,社会经济地位(SES)影响血压(BP)的因果机制尚不清楚。我们研究了SES对BP的影响,以及在孟加拉国农村成年人中,金属混合物暴露差异介导这些影响的程度。方法:本研究纳入了来自孟加拉国维生素E和硒试验(BEST)的5923名参与者,这是一个前瞻性队列,随访6年,在基线时重复进行血压评估,每两年随访3次。基线暴露包括SES指标:教育和农业土地所有权(社会经济地位,SEP)和金属混合物:血砷、铅、硒和尿砷。我们应用参数和中介g公式,以及广义加权分位数和回归,估计SES对BP结果的总、直接和间接影响,并使用四向分解进行因果中介分析。结果:高等教育使血压升高,SEP降低血压升高。高等教育和SEP都降低了金属接触。金属混合物介导SES对BP的影响。例如,高等教育使收缩压(SBP)增加3.53 mmHg (95% CI: 2.23, 4.82),而纯天然间接效应通过减少金属含量显示了-0.44 mmHg (95% CI: -0.62, -0.27)的保护途径。对于SEP,其对收缩压的保护作用近42%是由较低的金属暴露介导的。结论:孟加拉国农村地区BP结果的社会经济差异部分可以用金属混合物暴露的不平等来解释。减少金属暴露可以减轻中低收入国家血压测量中与ses相关的差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Metal Mixtures Mediate the Socioeconomic Gradient in Blood Pressure: A Four-Way Decomposition in a Prospective Rural Bangladeshi Cohort.

Background: The causal mechanisms by which socioeconomic status (SES) affects blood pressure (BP) in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) remain poorly understood. We examined the effects of SES on BP, and the extent to which disparities in metal mixture exposures mediate these effects among rural Bangladeshi adults.

Methods: This study included 5923 participants from the Bangladesh Vitamin E and Selenium Trial (BEST), a prospective cohort followed for six years with repeated BP assessments at baseline and three biennial follow-ups. Baseline exposures included SES indicators: education and agricultural land ownership (socioeconomic position, SEP), and metal mixtures: blood arsenic, lead, selenium, and urinary arsenic. We applied the parametric and mediational g-formula, along with generalized weighted quantile sum regression, to estimate total, direct, and indirect effects of SES on BP outcomes and conduct causal mediation analysis with four-way decomposition.

Results: Higher education increased BP, whereas SEP decreased the elevation of BP. Both higher education and SEP lowered metal exposures. Metal mixtures mediated the effects of SES on BP. For example, higher education increased systolic blood pressure (SBP) by 3.53 mmHg (95% CI: 2.23, 4.82), while the pure natural indirect effect showed a protective pathway of -0.44 mmHg (95% CI: -0.62, -0.27) through reduced metals. For SEP, nearly 42% of its protective effect on SBP was mediated by lower metal exposures.

Conclusions: Socioeconomic differentials in BP outcomes in rural Bangladesh are partly explained by inequalities in metal mixture exposures. Reducing metal exposures may mitigate SES-related disparities in BP measures in LMICS.

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