| Literature DB >> 36078786 |
Francisco Alejandro Montiel Ishino1, Claire E Rowan2, Kevin Villalobos1, Janani Rajbhandari-Thapa3, Faustine Williams1.
Abstract
Telomere length is affected by lifestyle and environmental factors and varies between racial and ethnic groups; however, studies are limited, with mixed findings. This study examined the effects of tobacco use and smoke exposure on mean telomere length to identify critical age periods by race/ethnicity. We used time-varying effect modeling on the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey for continuous years 1999-2002 to observe the effects of active tobacco use and environmental tobacco smoke-measured through serum cotinine-and mean telomere length for adults 19 to 85 and older (N = 7826). Models were run for Mexican American, other Hispanic, non-Hispanic White, non-Hispanic Black, and other/multi-race categories to allow for time-varying group differences, and controlled for biological sex, socioeconomic status, education, and ever-smoker status. Serum cotinine was found to have an increasing effect on telomere length from age 37 to approximately age 74 among Mexican Americans. Among other/multi-race individuals serum cotinine was found to have a decreasing effect at approximately age 42, and among Blacks, it had an overall decreasing effect from age 61 to 78. Findings reveal a further need to focus additional support and resources to intervene regarding disparate health effects from tobacco use and environmental smoke exposure for already vulnerable groups at particular ages.Entities:
Keywords: cotinine; environmental tobacco smoke; health disparity; minority and vulnerable populations; telomere; time-varying effect modeling (TVEM); tobacco use
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36078786 PMCID: PMC9518386 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph191711069
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Sample sociodemographic variables (N = 7826).
| N | % | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Race/Ethnicity | ||||
| Mexican American | 1875 | 7.0 | ||
| Other Hispanic | 417 | 6.8 | ||
| Non-Hispanic White | 3965 | 72.9 | ||
| Non-Hispanic Black | 1333 | 9.3 | ||
| Other race/multi-racial | 236 | 4.0 | ||
| Sex | ||||
| Female | 4056 | 51.4 | ||
| Male | 3770 | 48.6 | ||
| Education | ||||
| High school degree or above | 5175 | 78.6 | ||
| Below high school | 2639 | 21.4 | ||
| Poverty-income-ratio | ||||
| Above poverty level | 5825 | 79.2 | ||
| At or below poverty level | 2001 | 20.8 | ||
| Lifetime cigarette smoker | ||||
| No | 4015 | 50.1 | ||
| Yes | 3796 | 49.9 | ||
| 95% CI 2 | ||||
| Mean | SEM 1 | Lower | Upper | |
| Age (R:19–85) | 46.1 | 0.4 | 45.4 | 46.9 |
| Mean telomere length (T/S ratio) | 1.055 | 0.015 | 1.025 | 1.086 |
| Serum cotinine (ng/mL) | 59.3 | 3.2 | 52.7 | 65.8 |
1 SEM: Standard error of mean; 2 CI: Confidence interval.
Figure 1Mean telomere length intercept only model.
Figure 2Mean telomere length intercept only models by race/ethnicity.
Figure 3Effect of serum cotinine on mean telomere length by race/ethnicity compared to non-Hispanic White.
Figure 4Time varying effect of serum cotinine on mean telomere length by race compared to non-Hispanic Whites.