Author:
IRIBARREN C.,JACOBS D. R.,SIDNEY S.,CLAXTON A. J.,FEINGOLD K. R.
Abstract
A multiethnic cohort of adult members of the Kaiser Permanente
Medical Care Program
(55300 men and 65271 women) was followed for 15 years (1979–93) to
assess the association
between total cholesterol and risk of infections (other than respiratory
and HIV) diagnosed in
the in-patient setting. Using multivariate Cox regression, total cholesterol
was inversely and
significantly related to urinary tract, venereal, musculo-skeletal, and
all infections among men;
and to urinary tract, all genito-urinary, septicaemia or bacteraemia, miscellaneous
viral site
unspecified, and all infections among women. The reduction of risk of all
infections associated
with a 1 s.d. increase in total cholesterol was
8% in both men (95% CI, 4–12%) and women
(95% CI, 5–11%). For urinary tract infections among men, as for septicaemia
or bacteraemia
and nervous system infections among women, the risk relation was restricted
to persons aged
55–89 years. Nervous system infections were positively related to
total cholesterol among
women aged 25–54. In both genders, the significant inverse association
with all infections
persisted after excluding the first 5 years of follow-up. Collectively,
these data are suggestive of
an inverse association, although not entirely consistent, between
total cholesterol and incidence
of infections either requiring hospitalization or acquired in the hospital.
Further research is
needed to elucidate whether these associations are biologically plausible
or represent
uncontrolled confounding by unmeasured risk factors.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
73 articles.
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