| Literature DB >> 34308532 |
Noémie Letellier1, Sindana D Ilango2,3, Marion Mortamais4, Christophe Tzourio5, Audrey Gabelle4,6, Jean-Philippe Empana7, Cécilia Samieri5, Claudine Berr4,6, Tarik Benmarhnia3,8.
Abstract
This study aimed to investigate the role of cardiovascular health (CVH) and vascular events as potential contributors to socioeconomic inequalities in dementia using causal mediation analyses. We used data from the Three-City Cohort, a French population-based study with 12 years of follow-up, with active search of dementia cases and validated diagnosis. Individual socioeconomic status was assessed using education, occupation and income. A CVH score as defined by the American Heart Association and incident vascular events were considered separately as mediators. We performed multi-level Cox proportional and Aalen additive hazard regression models to estimate the total effects of socioeconomic status on dementia risk. To estimate natural direct and indirect effects through CVH and vascular events, we applied two distinct weighting methods to quantify the role of CVH and vascular events: Inverse Odds Ratio Weighting (IORW) and Marginal Structural Models (MSM) respectively. Among 5581 participants, the risk of dementia was higher among participants with primary education (HR 1.60, 95%CI 1.44-1.78), blue-collar workers (HR 1.62, 95%CI 1.43-1.84) and with lower income (HR 1.23, 95%CI 1.09-1.29). Using additive models, 571 (95% CI 288-782) and 634 (95% CI 246-1020) additional cases of dementia per 100 000 person and year were estimated for primary education and blue-collar occupation, respectively. Using IORW, the CVH score mediate the relationship between education or income, and dementia (proportion mediated 17% and 26%, respectively). Yet, considering vascular events as mediator, MSM generated indirect effects that were smaller and more imprecise. Socioeconomic inequalities in dementia risk were observed but marginally explained by CVH or vascular events mediators.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiovascular health; Dementia; Mediation analysis; Social determinants; Socioeconomic status
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34308532 PMCID: PMC8542549 DOI: 10.1007/s10654-021-00788-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Epidemiol ISSN: 0393-2990 Impact factor: 8.082
Individual characteristics of study population according to dementia status (N = 5581)
| Individual characteristics, n (%) | Non-demented | Demented |
|---|---|---|
| (n = 5066) | (n = 515) | |
| Age (years)a | 72.4 (69.0–76.5) | 75.6 (72.0–79.5) |
| Women | 3161 (62.4) | 352 (68.3) |
| Study center | ||
| Bordeaux | 902 (17.8) | 150 (29.1) |
| Dijon | 2869 (56.6) | 247 (48.0) |
| Montpellier | 1295 (25.6) | 118 (22.9) |
| Primary education | 1109 (21.9) | 163 (31.7) |
| Lower income | 1718 (33.9) | 216 (41.9) |
| Blue-collar workers | 797 (15.7) | 114 (22.1) |
| APOEƐ4 carrier | 939 (18.5) | 138 (26.8) |
| CVH scoreb | 8.2 (1.8) | 7.8 (2.0) |
| Incident vascular events | 357 (7.0) | 59 (11.5) |
CVH Cardiovascular Health
amedian (interquartile range)
bmean (SD) [total score range, 0–14]
Total effects of socioeconomic level on dementia risk (Weighted Cox proportional hazards model and Aalen modela, N = 5581)
| All-type incident dementia (n = 515) | Cox PH model | Aalen model | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HR | (95% CI) | Estimate | (95% CI) | ||
| Secondary or higher | 352/4309 (8.2) | ref | – | ||
| Primary | 163/1272 (12.8) | 1.60 | (1.44–1.78) | 571 × 10−5 | (269 × 10−5–873 × 10−5) |
| White-collar | 401/4670 (8.6) | ref | – | ||
| Blue-collar | 114/911 (12.5) | 1.62 | (1.43–1.84) | 634 × 10−5 | (246 × 10−5–1020 × 10−5) |
| Higher income | 299/3647 (8.2) | ref | – | ||
| Lower income | 216/1934 (11.2) | 1.23 | (1.09–1.39) | 221 × 10−5 | (− 79 × 10−5–521 × 10−5) |
HR hazard ratio; PH: Proportional Hazard; CI confidence interval
aAdjusted for age, gender, education (for income and occupation models), living alone (for income models), APOE4 and study centers
Total, direct and indirect effects of socioeconomic level through CVH score in binary and each component (using IORWa, N = 5581)
| Total effect | Natural direct | Natural indirect | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HR | (95% CI) | HR | (95% CI) | HR | (95% CI) | |
| 1.62 | [1.32–1.99] | 1.51 | [1.22–1.88] | 1.08 | [1.03–1.14] | |
| Components of CVH score | ||||||
| Biological components | 1.62 | [1.32–1.99] | 1.61 | [1.31–1.99] | 1.01 | [1.00–1.02] |
| Behavioral components | 1.62 | [1.32–1.99] | 1.60 | [1.30–1.98] | 1.01 | [0.99–1.04] |
| Biological components | ||||||
| Total cholesterol | 1.62 | [1.32–1.99] | 1.62 | [1.32–1.99] | 1.00 | [0.99–1.01] |
| Blood pressure | 1.62 | [1.32–1.99] | 1.60 | [1.30–1.95] | 1.01 | [1.00–1.03] |
| Fasting plasma glucose | 1.62 | [1.32–1.99] | 1.61 | [1.31–1.98] | 1.01 | [1.00–1.02] |
| Behavioral components | ||||||
| Smoking | 1.62 | [1.32–1.99] | 1.66 | [1.35–2.03] | 0.98 | [0.94–1.00] |
| Healthy diet | 1.62 | [1.32–1.99] | 1.56 | [1.26–1.94] | 1.04 | [0.99–1.09] |
| Physical activity | 1.62 | [1.32–1.99] | 1.63 | [1.33–1.99] | 1.00 | [0.98–1.01] |
| BMI | 1.62 | [1.32–1.99] | 1.61 | [1.31–2.00] | 1.01 | [0.97–1.05] |
| 1.64 | [1.25–2.11] | 1.64 | [1.24–2.17] | 1.00 | [0.93–1.08] | |
| Components of CVH score | ||||||
| Biological components | 1.64 | [1.25–2.11] | 1.64 | [1.25–2.12] | 1.00 | [0.99–1.02] |
| Behavioral components | 1.64 | [1.25–2.11] | 1.64 | [1.26–2.12] | 1.00 | [0.96–1.04] |
| Biological components | ||||||
| Total cholesterol | 1.64 | [1.25–2.11] | 1.64 | [1.25–2.11] | 1.00 | [0.98–1.01] |
| Blood pressure | 1.64 | [1.25–2.11] | 1.63 | [1.23–2.09] | 1.01 | [0.99–1.03] |
| Fasting plasma glucose | 1.64 | [1.25–2.11] | 1.63 | [1.25–2.11] | 1.00 | [0.99–1.02] |
| Behavioral components | ||||||
| Smoking | 1.64 | [1.25–2.11] | 1.66 | [1.27–2.15] | 0.99 | [0.96–1.01] |
| Healthy diet | 1.64 | [1.25–2.11] | 1.65 | [1.23–2.16] | 0.99 | [0.93–1.06] |
| Physical activity | 1.64 | [1.25–2.11] | 1.64 | [1.26–2.11] | 1.00 | [0.98–1.01] |
| BMI | 1.64 | [1.25–2.11] | 1.62 | [1.23–2.10] | 1.01 | [0.96–1.07] |
| 1.24 | [0.99–1.58] | 1.19 | [0.94–1.51] | 1.05 | [1.00–1.11] | |
| Components of CVH score | ||||||
| Biological components | 1.24 | [0.99–1.58] | 1.24 | [0.99–1.57] | 1.01 | [0.99–1.02] |
| Behavioral components | 1.24 | [0.99–1.58] | 1.25 | [1.00–1.60] | 0.99 | [0.97–1.01] |
| Biological components | ||||||
| Total cholesterol | 1.24 | [0.99–1.58] | 1.25 | [1.00–1.60] | 0.99 | [0.97–1.01] |
| Blood pressure | 1.24 | [0.99–1.58] | 1.22 | [0.98–1.56] | 1.02 | [1.00–1.06] |
| Fasting plasma glucose | 1.24 | [0.99–1.58] | 1.24 | [0.99–1.58] | 1.00 | [0.99–1.02] |
| Behavioral components | ||||||
| Smoking | 1.24 | [0.99–1.58] | 1.24 | [0.99–1.58] | 1.00 | [0.99–1.01] |
| Healthy diet | 1.24 | [0.99–1.58] | 1.25 | [1.00–1.59] | 0.99 | [0.97–1.01] |
| Physical activity | 1.24 | [0.99–1.58] | 1.23 | [0.99–1.57] | 1.01 | [0.99–1.03] |
| BMI | 1.24 | [0.99–1.58] | 1.24 | [0.99–1.58] | 1.00 | [0.98–1.02] |
HR hazard ratio; CI confidence interval
The observed differences in total effects between table 2 and table 3 can be explained by the use of bootstraps for table 3
aAdjusted for age, gender, education (for income and occupation models), living alone (for income models), APOE4 and study centers
bGlobal CVH score as a continous variable (total score range, 0–14)
Total, direct and indirect effects of socioeconomic level through non-fatal vascular events (MSMa with inverse probability weighting)
| Total | Natural direct | Natural indirect effect | |
|---|---|---|---|
| HR (95% CI) | HR (95% CI) | HR (95% CI) | |
| Primary education (N = 5526b) | 1.37 (1.08–1.73) | 1.36 (1.08–1.72) | 1.00 (0.88–1.14) |
| Blue–collar workers (N = 5526b) | 1.63 (1.25–2.12) | 1.64 (1.26–2.14) | 1.01 (0.86–1.16) |
| Lower income (N = 5515b) | 1.16 (0.92–1.47) | 1.16 (0.92–1.47) | 1.00 (0.88–1.15) |
HR hazard ratio; CI confidence interval
aAdjusted for age, gender, education (for income and occupation models), living alone (for income models), APOE4 and study centers
b55 participants excluded due to extreme values for IPW