Epigenetic-based age acceleration in a representative sample of older Americans: Associations with aging-related morbidity and mortality.

TitleEpigenetic-based age acceleration in a representative sample of older Americans: Associations with aging-related morbidity and mortality.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsFaul, J, Kim, JK, Levine, ME, Thyagarajan, B, Weir, DR, Crimmins, EM
JournalPNAS
Volume120
Issue9
Paginatione2215840120
ISSN Number1091-6490
KeywordsAcceleration, Aging, Biomarkers, Cross-Sectional Studies, DNA Methylation, Epigenesis, genetic
Abstract

Biomarkers developed from DNA methylation (DNAm) data are of growing interest as predictors of health outcomes and mortality in older populations. However, it is unknown how epigenetic aging fits within the context of known socioeconomic and behavioral associations with aging-related health outcomes in a large, population-based, and diverse sample. This study uses data from a representative, panel study of US older adults to examine the relationship between DNAm-based age acceleration measures in the prediction of cross-sectional and longitudinal health outcomes and mortality. We examine whether recent improvements to these scores, using principal component (PC)-based measures designed to remove some of the technical noise and unreliability in measurement, improve the predictive capability of these measures. We also examine how well DNAm-based measures perform against well-known predictors of health outcomes such as demographics, SES, and health behaviors. In our sample, age acceleration calculated using "second and third generation clocks," PhenoAge, GrimAge, and DunedinPACE, is consistently a significant predictor of health outcomes including cross-sectional cognitive dysfunction, functional limitations and chronic conditions assessed 2 y after DNAm measurement, and 4-y mortality. PC-based epigenetic age acceleration measures do not significantly change the relationship of DNAm-based age acceleration measures to health outcomes or mortality compared to earlier versions of these measures. While the usefulness of DNAm-based age acceleration as a predictor of later life health outcomes is quite clear, other factors such as demographics, SES, mental health, and health behaviors remain equally, if not more robust, predictors of later life outcomes.

DOI10.1073/pnas.2215840120
Citation Key12923
PubMed ID36802439
Grant ListU01 AG009740 / AG / NIA NIH HHS / United States