Title: Origins of the
1Origins of the flame within Social and
Physical Correlates of Inflammation in U.S.
Children.
- Jennifer Beam Dowd, Hunter College,
- CUNY Institute for Demographic Research (CIDR)
- Anna Zajacova, Allison Aiello, Center for Social
Epidemiology and Population Health, University of
Michigan
2Background and Motivation
- Disparities in health by SES in the U.S. begin in
childhood (Case, Lubotsky, Paxson 2002) - Biological pathways linking SES to health,
especially in children, are not clear. - Early environments can shape developing
physiological systems (critical and sensitive
periods)
Background Data/Methods Results Conclusions
3Inflammation
- Integral part of the human stress and immune
response - Pro-inflammatory cytokines regulate the
production of acute-phase proteins such as
C-reactive protein (CRP) which fight infection
and promote repair of damaged issues. - Little is known about the predictors of low-grade
inflammation in children
Background Data/Methods Results Conclusion
4Contributors to inflammation
- Independent predictors of increased inflammation
in adults - Higher BMI (inflammatory cytokines expressed in
adipose tissue) - Smoking
- Poor sleep quality/short sleep
- Diet high in saturated and trans fat
- Chronic Infections
Background Data/Methods
Results Conclusion
5Health Consequences of Inflammation
- Elevated CRP is associated with risk of
- myocardial infarction, stroke, atherosclerosis
- insulin resistance, Type II diabetes
- vascular dementia, Alzheimers disease.
- Life-long inflammatory burden may shape later
life patterns of aging and mortality. (Crimmins
and Finch 2006).
Background Data/Methods Results Conclusion
6Inflamm-aging
- Chronic immune activation, including a persistent
inflammatory status, may drive what we considered
age related declines in functioning and immune
response - Thus large differences across groups
(race/ethnicity/SES) in burden of inflammation
could play a role in observed differences in
aging rates and longevity.
Background Data/Methods Results Conclusion
7SES differences in Infection Burden in U.S.
children
8Previous Work
- Lower SES associated with higher CRP in U.S.
adults - Mixed results for race/ethnicity-some studies
show highest levels for blacks, some for
Hispanics - European studies have not found social
inequalities in CRP in childhood, differences
emerge later. - To our knowledge, no existing studies looking at
CRP disparities in U.S. children
Background Data/Methods Results Conclusion
9Primary Research Questions
- Are physical (infections, BMI, etc) and social
(family income, race/ethnicity) risk factors
associated with inflammation in U.S. children? - Do physical risk factors mediate the relationship
between social factors and levels of inflammation
in U.S. children?
Background Data/Methods Results Conclusion
10Secondary Question
- Hygiene hypothesis Mixed evidence on whether
higher infectious burden in childhood promotes
better or worse regulation of inflammation later
in life - Are chronic infections related to inflammation in
U.S. children? Are proxy measures of pathogen
exposure related to inflammation in U.S.
children?
Background Data/Methods Results Conclusion
11Data
- National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey
(NHANES), 1999-2004 - Cross-sectional, representative sample of
non-institutionalized U.S. population - Face-to-face interview, medical exam, collection
of blood and urine - Our sample consists of children aged 3-17, N 6338
Background Data/Methods Results Conclusion
12Measures Outcome
- High Sensitivity C-reactive Protein (CRP) mg/L
- Distribution is right-skewed, transformed to
Ln(CRP)
Background Data/Methods Results Conclusion
13Measures Physical Predictors
- Infections Positive Serostatus for
- Cytomegalovirus (CMV)
- Herpes Simplex Virus Type 1 (HSV-1)
- Helicobacter Pylori (H Pylori)
- Cryptosporidium
- Toxoplasmosis
- Hepatitis A Virus (HAV)
- Infectious Burden (Factor Score)
Background Data/Methods Results Conclusion
14Measures Physical Predictors
- Body Mass Index (BMI) (kg/m2)
- Illness in the last 30 days (0/1)
- Low birth weight (0/1)
- Mother Smoked during pregnancy (0/1)
- Currently a smoker in the Household (0/1)
- Cotinine (log transformed)
- Triclosan (log transformed, N557)
- White Blood Cell Count
- Vitamin D (log transformed)
Background Data/Methods Results Conclusion
15Measures Social Predictors
- Age (continuous)
- Sex
- Foreign Born (0/1)
- Household size (continuous)
- Race/ethnicity (White/Black/Mexican-American)
- SES
- Poverty-Income Ratio (Ratio of Family Income to
Poverty Line) - Years of Education of the Household Reference
Person
Background Data/Methods Results Conclusion
16Methods
- OLS Regressions
- Ln(CRP) a ß1(Social) ß2(Physical) e
- Infection burden score created with M-Plus,
confirmatory factor analysis with
full-information maximum likelihood estimation - All analyses conducted with STATA 10.0 SVY
commands to account for complex survey design
Background Data/Methods
Results Conclusion
17Descriptive Statistics
18Results
19Results
20Conclusions
- BMI and current/recent illness are strong
predictors of CRP in U.S. children - Differences in CRP levels by income largely
accounted for by BMI and recent illness. - Higher levels for Mexican-American race/ethnicity
not explained by physical vars.
21Conclusions
- Hygiene Hypothesis Still a mystery
- --Pro increased HH size associated with lower
CRP, Being foreign-born associated with lower CRP - --Cons infection coefficients all reflect
positive effects on CRP, foreign-born effect
explained by BMI, Triclosan coefficient negative
22Conclusions/Next Steps
- Higher BMI and potentially more frequent acute
infections contribute to greater levels of
low-grade inflammation among U.S. children with
lower family income. - What explains higher levels for Mexican-American
children? - Potential life-course health implications aging,
CVD, cognition and learning?
23Acknowledgements
- Thanks to collaborators Anna Zajacova and Allison
Aiello, Research assistance from Megan Todd - Support from the NIH 1R21NR011181-01