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Abstract Number: 1958

Effect of Poverty Status in 2009, % of Years in Poverty Between 2003 and 2009, and Exiting Poverty Permanently By 2009 on SLE Damage in 2015

Edward H. Yelin1, Jinoos Yazdany2 and Laura Trupin3, 1Medicine/Rheumatology, UC San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, 2Rheumatology, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, 3Medicine/Rheumatology, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA

Meeting: 2016 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting

Date of first publication: September 28, 2016

Keywords: health disparities, socioeconomic factors and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)

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Session Information

Date: Monday, November 14, 2016

Title: Plenary Session II: Discovery 2016

Session Type: ACR Plenary Session

Session Time: 11:00AM-12:30PM

Background/Purpose : The relationship between poverty and SLE damage has been observed in several cross-sectional studies. The aim of the present study was to use longitudinal data to examine the effects of poverty status, dose of poverty, and exiting poverty on subsequent disease damage.

Methods: Data are from the UCSF Lupus Outcomes Study. Study participants were recruited from diverse sources in 2003 and followed through 2015 through annual structured surveys. SLE diagnoses were confirmed by medical record review.  In each year we characterized the respondents’ poverty status in the surveys based on household income and family size.  Beginning in 2009, the survey included a validated measure of disease damage, the Brief Index of Lupus Damage.  We used ordinary least squares regression to estimate the impact of 1) poverty in 2009, 2) the dose of poverty defined as the percentage of years in poverty between 2003 and 2009, and 3) the effect of permanently leaving poverty by 2009 on change in damage between 2009 and 2015, with and without adjustment for potential confounding variables (demographics, education, SLE duration, characteristics of health care, and health behaviors).  To account for attrition and missing variables, multiple imputation was used.

Results: In 2009, there were 783 respondents to the Lupus Outcomes Study annual survey, of whom 94% were female, 35% non-white, and 15% were in poverty. They were 49.8(SD12.3) years of age and had had SLE for 16.9(SD8.3) years. Damage scores averaged 1.9(SD2.0, range 0-12). Table 1 shows the effect of poverty in 2009, dose of poverty between 2003 and 2009, and exiting poverty permanently by 2009 on change in damage, with and without adjustment. Those in poverty had greater increases in damage as did those continuously poor vs. poor some years vs. never poor.  Exiting poverty was associated with change in damage scores closer to that among those who were never poor with the passage of as little as a year and smaller than those who remained poor. In all analyses, adjustment had minimal effect on results, indicating that the effect of confounding variables was minimal.  

Conclusion: Persons with SLE who were poor in all years experience greater accrual of damage than those who were poor only some years and those who were never poor, but exiting poverty is associated with a decreased accrual of damage. Income support policies may be critical to reducing damage in SLE.

Table 1. Effect of Poverty, Percent of Years in Poverty, and Exiting Poverty on Change in BILD Damage Scores, 2009-2015
Poverty Status in 2009 Percent of Years in Poverty, 2003-2009

Poor

Not Poor All Years ≥50% of Yrs. <50% of Yrs. Never Poor
Unadjusted

2.02

1.33

2.52

159

1.54

1.32

Adjusted

1.97

1.34

2.45

1.45

1.49

1.34

Exited Poverty Permanently by 2009
Stayed Poor 1 Yr. Ago 2-3 Yrs. Ago 5-11 Yrs. Ago

Total

Never Poor
Unadjusted

2.08

1.47

1.43

1.17

1.40

1.33

Adjusted

1.98

1.24

1.44

1.08

1.30

1.36

Cells are change in damage scores. Adjusted models include demographics, duration, health care characteristics and health behaviors. Change in damage scores differs significantly by poverty status, percent of years in poverty, and exiting poverty, with and without adjustment (p < .05).


Disclosure: E. H. Yelin, None; J. Yazdany, None; L. Trupin, None.

To cite this abstract in AMA style:

Yelin EH, Yazdany J, Trupin L. Effect of Poverty Status in 2009, % of Years in Poverty Between 2003 and 2009, and Exiting Poverty Permanently By 2009 on SLE Damage in 2015 [abstract]. Arthritis Rheumatol. 2016; 68 (suppl 10). https://acrabstracts.org/abstract/effect-of-poverty-status-in-2009-of-years-in-poverty-between-2003-and-2009-and-exiting-poverty-permanently-by-2009-on-sle-damage-in-2015/. Accessed .
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