Literature DB >> 35202971

Comparing different operationalizations of allostatic load measured in mid-life and their patterning by race and cumulative life course socioeconomic status.

Katrina L Kezios1, Shakira F Suglia2, David Matthew Doyle3, Ezra Susser4, Gary Bradwin5, Piera Cirillo6, Barbara Cohn6, Bruce Link7, Pam Factor-Litvak8.   

Abstract

Since its conceptualization, there has been a lack of consensus on the best way to operationalize allostatic load (AL). As a marker of the cumulative, physiological wear and tear on the body resulting from chronic exposure to stressors, it follows that AL should be higher among people who have faced more stressful life experiences. Thus, the purpose of this study was to construct AL scores using different operationalizations and, as a measure of construct validity, compare whether each construction produced expected disparities in AL by race and a composite socioeconomic status (SES) variable which accounts for measures over the life course; we also explored differences by sex. We conducted the study in a sample of 45-52-year-old offspring from the Child Health and Development Studies, a longitudinal birth cohort established in the early 1960s. AL scores were constructed in 6 different ways and included 10 biomarkers from inflammatory, neuroendocrine, cardiovascular, and metabolic systems. Our main approach to constructing AL was to sum across high-risk biomarker quartiles, correct for medication use, and use sex-specific high-risk quartiles for specific biomarkers. Alternative constructions did not use sex-specific quartiles and/or weighted biomarkers within subsystems and/or did not correct for medication use. We estimated differences in AL scores by race, SES, sex and their pairwise interactions. All constructions of AL, including the main approach, produced expected disparities by race (higher scores for Black vs. non-Black participants) and life course SES (higher scores for low vs. high SES participants). However, disparities by sex only emerged when the AL score was constructed via approaches that did not use sex-specific high-risk quartiles; for these alternative constructions, overall, female participants had higher AL scores than male participants and Black female participants had the highest AL scores in the sample. For most constructions, the pairwise interaction between sex and SES, showed a stronger disparity in AL scores between low and high-SES female compared with low- and high-SES male participants; this suggests that, in terms of lowering AL, high life course SES may be more important for female than male participants. In conclusion, our results suggest that the basic AL concept is consistently expressed in different operationalizations, making it an especially useful and robust tool for understanding disparities by race and SES.
Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Allostatic load; Disparities; Life course; Patterns

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2022        PMID: 35202971      PMCID: PMC8977239          DOI: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2022.105689

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychoneuroendocrinology        ISSN: 0306-4530            Impact factor:   4.905


  42 in total

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