Abstract

Both higher socioeconomic status (SES) and supportive personal relationships confer health benefits, including better immune function. This study assessed the joint impact of SES and social support on the expression of a latent herpesvirus, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), in a group of highly stressed women. Two-hundred and twenty four women either awaiting further evaluation following an abnormal mammogram or newly diagnosed with breast cancer completed questionnaires and provided blood samples to assess EBV viral capsid antigen (VCA) IgG antibody titers. More highly educated women with more support from friends had lower EBV VCA antibody titers, reflecting a stronger cellular immune response to the latent virus; however, among less educated women, friend support was not associated with EBV antibody titers. As revealed in an ancillary analysis, more highly educated women with more friend support had lower systolic blood pressure (SBP); however, friend support was not associated with SBP among less educated women. Neither depression nor perceived stress mediated these associations. Neither cancer status nor cancer stage among those diagnosed with cancer was significantly related to these outcomes. Lower SES women may not reap the same immunological benefits from friend support when experiencing a stressful life event as their higher SES counterparts.

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