In a new study, the Study on Stress, Spirituality and Health (SSSH) linked proteomics from religiosity-based stress to cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk markers. This study marks the first investigation of protein levels associated with religion and spirituality in any group.
South Asians have an elevated CVD risk compared to other racial/ethnic groups, with the biological risk factors attributable to type 2 diabetes risk factors, and the rest stemming from traditional risk factors which show no enhancements as compared to other racial/ethnic groups.
“Before we can develop the best interventions to reduce CVD disparities, we need to understand the biological pathways through which health disparities are produced,” said principal investigator and co-senior author Alexandra Shields, PhD, associate professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School (HMS). “As this study shows, psychosocial factors—and religious or spiritual struggles in particular—can affect biological processes that lead to CVD in this high-risk population. Spirituality can also serve as a resource for resilience and have a protective effect. Given that many of the minority communities that experience higher levels of CVD also report higher levels of religiosity and spirituality, studies such as the SSSH may help identify new leverage points, such as spiritually focused psychotherapy for those in spiritual distress, that could reduce risk of CVD for such individuals.”
The study had 100 South Asian participants, 50 diagnosed with CVD and 50 without. The participants were drawn from the Mediators of Atherosclerosis in South Asians Living in America (MASALA) Study, which is following 1164 South Asian participants to investigate the factors that lead to heart disease among this racial/ethnic group. Three proteins were found to be involved in CVD risk after adjustment for diabetes (Contactin-5 [CNTN5], Low affinity immunoglobulin gamma Fc region receptor II-a [FCGR2A], and Complement factor B [CFB]), and of these, the expression of two (Contactin-5 and Complement factor B) were slightly modified by religious struggles interacting with adverse life events.
The results indicate that there may be unique protein expressions associated with CVD among individuals of South Asian descent, and these associations may be affected by religious struggles, such as feeling abandoned by God. “Understanding the pathways of this mechanism at the molecular level using proteomics technology is crucial to developing potential interventions that can help reduce CVD incidence in this population,” says Long H. Ngo, PhD., lead author and co-director of Biostatistics in the Division of General Medicine at BIDMC and associate professor of Medicine at HMS.
Co-senior author Towia Libermann, PhD, at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, added: “The kinds of blood-based protein biomarkers used in this study are particularly effective in assessing CVD risk because they carry clinical information about risk of disease and are the most commonly used molecules for diagnostic applications.
Source: Medical Xpress
Journal information: Long H. Ngo et al, Plasma protein expression profiles, cardiovascular disease, and religious struggles among South Asians in the MASALA study, Scientific Reports (2021). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-79429-1