Financial stress and sleep duration in immune and neuroendocrine patterning. An analytical triangulation in ELSA

IF 7.6 2区 医学 Q1 IMMUNOLOGY Brain, Behavior, and Immunity Pub Date : 2025-03-13 DOI:10.1016/j.bbi.2025.03.006
Odessa S. Hamilton, Andrew Steptoe
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Abstract

Background

Proinflammatory and neuroendocrine mediators are implicated in disease aetiopathogenesis. Stress increases concentrations of immune-neuroendocrine biomarkers through a complex network of brain-body signalling pathways. Suboptimal sleep further modulates these processes by altering major effector systems that sensitise the brain to stress. Given the ubiquitous, impactful nature of material deprivation, we tested for a synergistic association of financial stress and suboptimal sleep with these molecular processes.

Methods

With data drawn from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA), associations were tested on 4,940 participants (∼66 ± 9.4 years) across four-years (2008–2012). Through analytical triangulation, we tested whether financial stress (>60% insufficient resources) and suboptimal sleep (≤5 / ≥9  h) were independently and interactively associated with immune-neuroendocrine profiles, derived from a latent profile analysis (LPA) of C-reactive protein, fibrinogen, white blood cell counts, hair cortisol, and insulin-like growth factor-1.

Results

A three-class LPA model offered the greatest parsimony. After adjustment for genetic predisposition, sociodemographics, lifestyle, and health, financial stress was associated with short-sleep cross-sectionally (RRR = 1.45; 95% CI = 1.18–1.79; p < 0.001) and longitudinally (RRR = 1.31; 95% CI = 1.02–1.68; p = 0.035), and it increased risk of belonging to the high-risk inflammatory profile by 42% (95% CI = 1.12–1.80; p = 0.004). Suboptimal sleep was not related to future risk of high-risk profile membership, nor did it moderate financial stress-biomarker profile associations.

Discussion

Results advance psychoneuroimmunological knowledge by revealing how inflammation and neuroendocrine markers cluster in older cohorts and respond to financial stress over time. Financial stress associations with short-sleep are supported. The null role of suboptimal sleep, as exposure and mediator, in profile membership, provides valuable insight into the dynamic role of sleep in immune-neuroendocrine processes.
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经济压力和睡眠时间在免疫和神经内分泌模式中的作用。ELSA的分析三角测量。
背景:促炎和神经内分泌介质参与疾病的病原发生。应激通过复杂的脑-体信号通路网络增加免疫-神经内分泌生物标志物的浓度。次优睡眠通过改变大脑对压力敏感的主要效应系统来进一步调节这些过程。鉴于物质匮乏无处不在、影响深远,我们测试了经济压力和睡眠欠佳与这些分子过程之间的协同关联。方法:使用来自英国老龄化纵向研究(ELSA)的数据,对4,940名参与者(~ 66 ± 9.4 岁)进行了四年(2008-2012)的关联测试。通过分析三角测量,我们测试了财务压力(bbb60 %资源不足)和次优睡眠(≤5/≥9 h)是否与免疫-神经内分泌谱独立且相互作用相关,这些谱来自c反应蛋白、纤维蛋白原、白细胞计数、毛发皮质醇和胰岛素样生长因子-1的潜在谱分析(LPA)。结果:三级LPA模型最节省。在对遗传易感性、社会人口统计学、生活方式和健康进行调整后,财务压力与睡眠不足横断面相关(RRR = 1.45;95 % CI = 1.18 - -1.79;p 讨论:研究结果揭示了炎症和神经内分泌标志物如何在老年人群中聚集,并随着时间的推移对经济压力做出反应,从而提高了心理神经免疫学知识。经济压力与睡眠不足有关联。次优睡眠的无效作用,作为暴露和中介,在剖面成员,提供了有价值的洞察睡眠在免疫-神经内分泌过程中的动态作用。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
29.60
自引率
2.00%
发文量
290
审稿时长
28 days
期刊介绍: Established in 1987, Brain, Behavior, and Immunity proudly serves as the official journal of the Psychoneuroimmunology Research Society (PNIRS). This pioneering journal is dedicated to publishing peer-reviewed basic, experimental, and clinical studies that explore the intricate interactions among behavioral, neural, endocrine, and immune systems in both humans and animals. As an international and interdisciplinary platform, Brain, Behavior, and Immunity focuses on original research spanning neuroscience, immunology, integrative physiology, behavioral biology, psychiatry, psychology, and clinical medicine. The journal is inclusive of research conducted at various levels, including molecular, cellular, social, and whole organism perspectives. With a commitment to efficiency, the journal facilitates online submission and review, ensuring timely publication of experimental results. Manuscripts typically undergo peer review and are returned to authors within 30 days of submission. It's worth noting that Brain, Behavior, and Immunity, published eight times a year, does not impose submission fees or page charges, fostering an open and accessible platform for scientific discourse.
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