Title: | Early-life risk factors, accelerated biological aging and the late-life risk of mortality and morbidity |
Journal: | QJM |
Published: | 1 Nov 2023 |
Pubmed: | https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37930885/ |
DOI: | https://doi.org/10.1093/qjmed/hcad247 |
Title: | Early-life risk factors, accelerated biological aging and the late-life risk of mortality and morbidity |
Journal: | QJM |
Published: | 1 Nov 2023 |
Pubmed: | https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37930885/ |
DOI: | https://doi.org/10.1093/qjmed/hcad247 |
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BACKGROUND: Early-life exposure increases health risks throughout an individual's lifetime. Biological aging is influenced by early-life risks as a key process of disease development, but whether early-life risks could accelerate biological aging and elevate late-life mortality and morbidity risks remains unknown. Knowledge is also limited on the potential moderating role of healthy lifestyle.</p>
METHODS: We investigate associations of three early-life risks around birth, breastfeeding, maternal smoking, and birth weight, with biological aging of 202,580 UK Biobank participants (54.9 ± 8.1 year-old). Biological aging was quantified as KDM-BA, PhenoAge, and frailty. Moderate alcohol intake, no current smoking, healthy diet, BMI < 30 kg/m2, and regular physical activity were considered as healthy lifestyles. Mortality and morbidity data was retrieved from health records.</p>
RESULTS: Individual early-life risk factors were robustly associated with accelerated biological aging. A one-unit increase in the "early-life risk score" integrating the three factors was associated with 0.060 (standard error [SE]=0.0019) and 0.036-unit (SE = 0.0027) increase in z-scored KDM-BA acceleration and PhenoAge acceleration, respectively, and with 22.3% higher odds (95% confidence interval: 1.185-1.262) of frailty. Increased chronological age and healthy lifestyles could mitigate the accelerations of KDM-BA and PhenoAge, respectively. Associations of early-life risk score with late-life mortality and morbidity were mediated by biological aging (proportions: 5.66%∼43.12%). KDM-BA and PhenoAge accelerations could significantly mediate the impact on most outcomes except anxiety, and frailty could not mediate the impact on T2D.</p>
CONCLUSION: Biological aging could capture and mediate the late-life health risks stemming from the early-life risks, and could be potentially targeted for healthy longevity promotion.</p>
Application ID | Title |
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44430 | Genetic risk, environmental factors and chronic diseases and ageing outcomes |
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