J Particip Med. 2025 Dec 1;17:e69604. doi: 10.2196/69604.
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Chronic stress in African American individuals is multilayered amid the context of experiences of racism and discrimination. Cortisol dynamic range (CDR) may be an indicator of chronic stress, but CDR is understudied in African American populations compared with White populations, and is hypothesized to differ by sex.
OBJECTIVE: Using a community-engaged approach within the Fostering African-American Improvement in Total Health! (FAITH!) Heart Health+ ancillary study, we assessed the feasibility of participant-centric CDR collection, and its association with measures for individual, interpersonal, and structural stress and exposure to racism in medically underserved African American women and men.
METHODS: Participants residing in the Minneapolis-St Paul and Rochester, Minnesota areas provided survey data (everyday discrimination, perceived stress, mood, sleep quality, and high effort coping measures), and saliva samples (morning and afternoon) via at-home, self-collection kits for cortisol measurement. CDR was calculated as a difference in log cortisol levels (ie, log of the cortisol diurnal peak-to-nadir ratio). Geospatial Area Deprivation Index and the distance lived from George Floyd Square in Minneapolis were calculated. Linear regression examined the association between CDR and outcome variables.
RESULTS: Of consented participants (n=53), 70% (37/53) provided cortisol samples. The final analytic sample included 32 participants with complete and physiological diurnal cortisol curves (mean age 57.5 years, 62.5% [20/32] women). Lower (less dynamic) CDR in women (n=20) was associated with greater perceived stress (β=-0.07, P=.01), greater anxiety (β=-0.06, P=.01), higher Superwoman Schema score (β=-0.02, P=.04), and greater distance from George Floyd Square (β=-0.02, P=.01). No associations were observed in men (P>.05).
CONCLUSIONS: The current results suggest that CDR from participant-led saliva collection is feasible and may serve as a biomarker of chronic and physiological stress in African American women, particularly those residing in underresourced areas.
PMID:41325600 | DOI:10.2196/69604