Identification of Environmental Exposures Associated with Risk of Sarcoidosis in African Americans.

IF 6.8 2区 医学 Q1 RESPIRATORY SYSTEM Annals of the American Thoracic Society Pub Date : 2023-09-01 DOI:10.1513/AnnalsATS.202208-722OC
Albert M Levin, Ruicong She, Yalei Chen, Indra Adrianto, Indrani Datta, Ian M Loveless, Lori Garman, Courtney G Montgomery, Jia Li, Michael C Iannuzzi, Benjamin A Rybicki
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Abstract

Rationale: Sarcoidosis is a racially disparate granulomatous disease likely caused by environmental exposures, genes, and their interactions. Despite increased risk in African Americans, few environmental risk factor studies in this susceptible population exist. Objectives: To identify environmental exposures associated with the risk of sarcoidosis in African Americans and those that differ in effect by self-identified race and genetic ancestry. Methods: The study sample comprised 2,096 African Americans (1,205 with and 891 without sarcoidosis) compiled from three component studies. Unsupervised clustering and multiple correspondence analyses were used to identify underlying clusters of environmental exposures. Mixed-effects logistic regression was used to evaluate the association of these exposure clusters and the 51 single-component exposures with risk of sarcoidosis. A comparison case-control sample of 762 European Americans (388 with and 374 without sarcoidosis) was used to assess heterogeneity in exposure risk by race. Results: Seven exposure clusters were identified, five of which were associated with risk. The exposure cluster with the strongest risk association was composed of metals (P < 0.001), and within this cluster, exposure to aluminum had the highest risk (odds ratio, 3.30; 95% confidence interval [95% CI], 2.23-4.09; P < 0.001). This effect also differed by race (P < 0.001), with European Americans having no significant association with exposure (odds ratio, 0.86; 95% CI, 0.56-1.33). Within African Americans, the increased risk was dependent on genetic African ancestry (P = 0.047). Conclusions: Our findings support African Americans having sarcoidosis environmental exposure risk profiles that differ from those of European Americans. These differences may underlie racially disparate incidence rates that are partially explained by genetic variation differing by African ancestry.

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确定与非裔美国人肉样瘤病风险相关的环境暴露。
理由:肉样瘤病是一种具有种族差异的肉芽肿性疾病,可能是由环境暴露、基因及其相互作用引起的。尽管非裔美国人患病风险增加,但针对这一易感人群的环境风险因素研究却很少。研究目的确定与非裔美国人患肉芽肿病风险相关的环境暴露,以及那些因自我认同的种族和遗传血统而产生不同影响的环境暴露。研究方法:研究样本包括 2,096 名非裔美国人(1,205 人患有肉样瘤病,891 人不患有肉样瘤病),这些样本来自三项研究。采用无监督聚类和多重对应分析来确定环境暴露的潜在聚类。混合效应逻辑回归用于评估这些暴露集群和 51 种单成分暴露与肉样瘤病风险的关联。对 762 名欧洲裔美国人(388 人患有肉样瘤病,374 人未患有肉样瘤病)进行了病例对照比较,以评估不同种族暴露风险的异质性。结果显示确定了七个暴露群,其中五个与风险相关。风险关联性最强的暴露集群由金属组成(P P P P = 0.047)。结论:我们的研究结果表明,非裔美国人的肉样瘤病环境暴露风险特征与欧裔美国人不同。这些差异可能是造成不同种族发病率差异的原因,而非洲血统的遗传变异可以部分解释这种差异。
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来源期刊
Annals of the American Thoracic Society
Annals of the American Thoracic Society Medicine-Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine
CiteScore
9.30
自引率
3.60%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The Annals of the American Thoracic Society (AnnalsATS) is the official international online journal of the American Thoracic Society. Formerly known as PATS, it provides comprehensive and authoritative coverage of a wide range of topics in adult and pediatric pulmonary medicine, respiratory sleep medicine, and adult medical critical care. As a leading journal in its field, AnnalsATS offers up-to-date and reliable information that is directly applicable to clinical practice. It serves as a valuable resource for clinical specialists, supporting their formative and continuing education. Additionally, the journal is committed to promoting public health by publishing research and articles that contribute to the advancement of knowledge in these fields.
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