Cardiovascular Diseases Clinical Trial
To investigate the inverse association between socioeconomic status (SES) and cardiovascular disease (CVD) in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) Study cohort.
BACKGROUND:
It is well known that cardiovascular disease is inversely associated with SES. However, SES
may change over time and for socially mobile individuals it is not clear whether the
association with cardiovascular disease (CVD) differs for early life SES vs. mid-life SES.
Another issue is that an individual may have a relatively high income and/or wealth, but may
live in a low SES neighborhood. It would be desirable to separate out the effects of
individual level vs. aggregate level SES. Finally, there is limited evidence that the
association of SES with CVD may vary according to ethnic group. The bi-ethnic character of
the ARIC population makes it a fertile environment to test this hypothesis.
DESIGN NARRATIVE:
Mechanisms will be identified which explain the strong inverse association between
socioeconomic status (SES) over the life course and cardiovascular disease morbidity and
mortality in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) , a bi-ethnic population-based
sample of four U.S. communities. Health outcomes will include non-invasively measured
subclinical cardiovascular disease, as well as fatal and non-fatal clinical disease
manifestations ascertained over the course of 10 years of follow-up. Earlier life course
socioeconomic status and measurements of current socioeconomic status and biomedical
cardiovascular risk factors will be integrated with geocoded contemporary social
environmental exposures to assess their impact on cardiovascular function, metabolic
impairments, allostatic load, and subclinical and clinical disease. Multilevel analyses will
be performed with the goal of identifying pathways by which socioeconomic status is related
to cardiovascular disease, considering relevant health behavior, life styles, psychosocial
stressors/support mechanisms, chronic infection/chronic inflammatory burden, autonomic
nervous system dysfunction, and sustained metabolic impairments. The potential modification
of the above associations by the social environment will be addressed by these analyses, as
well as putative differences by gender and ethnicity.
These staged analytic goals are made possible by linking Census-based indicators of the
social environment to the rich data resources of the ARIC Study, a bi-ethnic,
community-based sample of men and women aged 45-64 years at the time of their baseline
examination in 1987-1989. This cohort was re-examined every three years through January,
1999 with ascertainment of SES during childhood, early adulthood and in mid-life,
health-relevant behaviors, numerous measurements of risk factors, and measures of
subclinical cardiovascular disease such as carotid artery wall thickness, arterial
distensibility, retinopathy, and lower extremity arterial disease. These data, as well as
validated information on hospital discharge diagnoses and on cause-specific mortality
accrued over 10 years of follow-up are available. Additional life course information on the
members of the ARIC cohort will be collected during Year 1 of the study.
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Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Retrospective
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