Abstract

Socioeconomic factors are associated with cardiovascular disease. C-reactive protein (CRP) is increasingly implicated as a candidate linking conventional risk factors and atherosclerosis. The impact of early- and later-life socioeconomic status (SES) on CRP levels has not been widely investigated and a handful of studies from high-income countries are inconsistent. We set out to examine the associations between lifecourse socioeconomic indicators (family income at birth, maternal education, family income at age 23 and own education) on CRP levels in young adults belonging to the 1982 Pelotas (Brazil) Birth Cohort Study (n = 5914). Early-life SES showed significant and graded associations with CRP levels at age 23 independently of later SES. For example, men with higher family income at birth showed higher CRP levels at age 23 (p = 0.001 for trend) and women with less educated mothers showed higher CRP levels (p = 0.01 for trend). Notably, differential directions of association between SES indicators and CRP levels between men and women were found. When adjusted for SES at age 23, men with the lowest family income at birth showed 42% lower CRP levels when compared to men in the highest family income group (−42; 95% CI: -60,-16). In contrast women born to the least educated mothers had the highest CRP levels (35; 95% CI -2, 86). In both sexes, adiposity accounted for the overwhelming majority of the associations between SES and CRP levels. Sex and gender roles specific to middle-income countries, socio-cultural and environmental conditions that may impact adiposity, and the level of epidemiological transition may be key factors that are linked to the associations between lifecourse SES and CRP levels. Public health strategies aimed at decreasing the burden of cardiovascular disease in middle-income settings, in addition to highlighting the risks associated with adult obesity, should not overlook the wide-ranging impacts of lifecourse social determinants.

Highlights

  • Socioeconomic factors are powerful determinants of cardiovascular disease (CVO) in high-income countries

  • This study examined lifecourse indicators of socioeconomic status (SES) in relation to C-reactive protein (CRP) levels at age 23 in a Brazilian birth cohort

  • We found that early-life SES was significantly associated with CRP levels, independent of later-life SES but income and education had differential associa­ tions with CRP levels in men and women

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Summary

Introduction

Socioeconomic factors are powerful determinants of cardiovascular disease (CVO) in high-income countries. It has been widely demonstrated that poorer and less educated individuals suffer significantly higher levels of mortality and morbidity associated with CVO than richer and more educated ones and that these patterns follow marked dose-response patterns (Cooper et aI., 2000; Dalstra et aI., 2005; Kaplan & Keil, 1993; Mackenbach, Cavelaars, Kunst, & Groenhof, 2000; Winkleby, Kraemer, Ahn, & Varady, 1998) Several of these studies have addressed potential pathways through which low socioeconomic status (SES) may lead to CVO, reporting that lifestyle factors such as diet, exercise and smoking fail to completely account for differences in outcome.

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