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Impact of socioeconomic deprivation on risk and disease activity of Sjögren's disease

Baranskaya, Aliaksandra
Bandeira, Matilde
Nadeem, Abdullah
Bowman, Simon J
Pucino, Valentina
Fisher, Benjamin A
Abstract
Background: We aimed to assess the impact of socioeconomic status (SES) on risk of Sjögren's disease (SjD) compared with non-Sjögren's Sicca and population controls, and on the clinical features of SjD. Methods: A single-centre UK cohort provided participants with SjD (European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology/American College of Rheumatology (EULAR/ACR) 2016, n=256) and non-Sjögren's Sicca (anti-Sjögren's syndrome type A (SSA)/Ro negative, n=175). Health Survey for England 2019 provided local population controls (n=972). English Indices of Multiple Deprivation (IMD) 2019 quintiles at recruitment and highest educational attainment defined SES.Adjusted logistic regression models evaluated associations between SES and diagnosis. Linear models assessed the impact of IMD on disease variables. Population controls were matched with age, sex and ethnicity to compare SES distributions. Results: Across IMD and educational attainment, participants with SjD had lower SES status compared to Sicca (p=0.008 and p=0.018). Odds of SjD (vs Sicca) were highest in most deprived IMD quintile 1 and reduced by 74% in quintile 2 (OR 0.26 (0.12, 0.58), p<0.001).Immunoglobulin G and A levels were inversely associated with IMD. In SjD, each unit increase in IMD reduced IgG by 6.03% (-9.84%, -2.05%; p=0.003) and IgA by 6.46% (-10.87%, -1.60%; p=0.010).When compared with population controls, IMD was not a risk factor for SjD (p=0.257) whereas Sicca was associated with lower deprivation (p=0.003). Those with a degree level qualification had the highest odds of diagnosis (SjD or Sicca). Conclusions: Low SES is associated with increased risk of SjD compared to Sicca and with higher immunoglobulin levels. The Sicca cohort may be less deprived than the general population. The role of environmental factors in modulating salivary gland pathology requires further exploration.
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Date
2026-03-04
Type
Article
Subject
Socioecononic factors, Epidemiology, Public health, Socioecononic factors, Rheumatology
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Citation
Baranskaya A, Bandeira M, Nadeem A, Bowman SJ, Pucino V, Fisher BA. Impact of socioeconomic deprivation on risk and disease activity of Sjögren's disease. RMD Open. 2026 Mar 4;12(1):e006348. doi: 10.1136/rmdopen-2025-006348.
Journal / Source Title
RMD Open
DOI
10.1136/rmdopen-2025-006348
PMID
41781166
Publisher
BMJ Publishing Group
Publisher’s URL
https://rmdopen.bmj.com/
Publisher’s statement
Note / Copyright