Social Genomic Determinants of Health: Understanding the Molecular Pathways by Which Neighborhood Disadvantage Affects Cancer Outcomes

Author:

Goel Neha123ORCID,Hernandez Alexandra12ORCID,Cole Steven W.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, Division of Surgical Oncology, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL

2. Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL

3. Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Harvard University, Boston, MA

4. Department of Psychiatry/ Biobehavioral Sciences and Medicine, University of California Los Angeles David Geffen School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA

Abstract

PURPOSE Neighborhoods represent complex environments with unique social, cultural, physical, and economic attributes that have major impacts on disparities in health, disease, and survival. Neighborhood disadvantage is associated with shorter breast cancer recurrence-free survival (RFS) independent of individual-level (race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, insurance, tumor characteristics) and health system-level determinants of health (receipt of guideline-concordant treatment). This persistent disparity in RFS suggests unaccounted mechanisms such as more aggressive tumor biology among women living in disadvantaged neighborhoods compared with advantaged neighborhoods. The objective of this article was to provide a clear framework and biological mechanistic explanation for how neighborhood disadvantage affects cancer survival. METHODS Development of a translational epidemiological framework that takes a translational disparities approach to study cancer outcome disparities through the lens of social genomics and social epigenomics. RESULTS The social genomic determinants of health, defined as the physiological gene regulatory pathways (ie, neural/endocrine control of gene expression and epigenetic processes) through which contextual factors, particularly one's neighborhood, can affect activity of the cancer genome and the surrounding tumor microenvironment to alter disease progression and treatment outcomes. CONCLUSION We propose a novel, multilevel determinants of health model that takes a translational epidemiological approach to evaluate the interplay between political, health system, social, psychosocial, individual, and social genomic determinants of health to understand social disparities in oncologic outcomes. In doing so, we provide a concrete biological pathway through which the effects of social processes and social epidemiology come to affect the basic biology of cancer and ultimately clinical outcomes and survival.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

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