4.7 Article

Racial Disparities in Olfactory Loss Among Older Adults in the United States

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/gerona/glt063

Keywords

Aging; Olfaction; Race disparity; Gender

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health
  2. National Institute on Aging
  3. Office of Women's Health Research
  4. Office of AIDS Research
  5. Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research [R01AG021487]
  6. National Institute on Aging [AG029795, K23 AG036762, T32000243]
  7. McHugh Otolaryngology Research Fund
  8. American Geriatrics Society
  9. Institute of Translational Medicine at The University of Chicago [KL2RR025000, UL1RR024999]

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Background. Age-related olfactory loss (presbyosmia) substantially decreases quality of life, presages neurodegenerative disease, impairs nutrition, and predicts mortality. We sought to determine how race is associated with olfactory loss in older American adults in order to inform both health care and policy. Methods. The National Social Life, Health and Aging Project interviewed a cross-sectional nationally representative probability sample of older adults in the United States. African Americans and Hispanics were oversampled, providing power to detect disparities for these subgroups. As part of an omnibus survey of demographic, social, psychological, and biological measures, National Social Life, Health and Aging Project assessed the ability to verbally identify odors by presenting five odor pens. Multivariate ordinal logistic regression quantified racial differences in odor identification, and then tested potential confounders. Results. African Americans and Hispanics had markedly worse olfactory function (controlling for gender and age) compared with whites (p < .001), twice the magnitude of gender differences, and comparable to aging 9 years. Cognition, household assets, and education accounted for the disparity found among Hispanics but not among African Americans. Moreover, other potential confounders, such as physical or mental health, including tobacco and alcohol use, did not account for the African American health disparity, which remained significant (p = .001) after including these factors. Conclusions. African Americans are more likely to suffer from presbyosmia, a health disparity not explained by gender, education, cognition, physical or mental health, and health behaviors. This novel health disparity may result from lifetime environmental exposures, diet, or genetic susceptibility. Dissecting the interactions among these putative mechanisms will provide insight into ameliorating this decline in critical human sensory function.

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