Christmas 2009:Perceived age as clinically useful biomarker of ageing: cohort study
1 Danish Twin Registry and Danish Aging Research Center, Institute of Public Health, University of Southern Denmark, DK-5000 Odense C, Denmark, 2 Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA, 3 Center of Human Development and Aging, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, New Jersey Medical School, Newark, NJ, USA, 4 Unilever Discover, Colworth House, Sharnbrook, Bedfordshire, 5 Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Rostock, Germany, 6 Netherlands Consortium for Healthy Ageing, Leiden University Medical Centre Leiden, LUMC, 2300RC Leiden, Netherlands
Correspondence to: K Christensen kchristensen@health.sdu.dk
Objective
To determine whether perceived age correlates with
survival and important age related phenotypes.
Design Follow-up study, with survival of twins determined up to January 2008, by which time 675 (37%) had died.
Setting Population based twin cohort in Denmark.
Participants 20 nurses, 10 young men, and 11 older women (assessors); 1826 twins aged
70.
Main outcome measures Assessors: perceived age of twins from photographs. Twins: physical and cognitive tests and molecular biomarker of ageing (leucocyte telomere length).
Results For all three groups of assessors, perceived age was significantly associated with survival, even after adjustment for chronological age, sex, and rearing environment. Perceived age was still significantly associated with survival after further adjustment for physical and cognitive functioning. The likelihood that the older looking twin of the pair died first increased with increasing discordance in perceived age within the twin pair—that is, the bigger the difference in perceived age within the pair, the more likely that the older looking twin died first. Twin analyses suggested that common genetic factors influence both perceived age and survival. Perceived age, controlled for chronological age and sex, also correlated significantly with physical and cognitive functioning as well as with leucocyte telomere length.
Conclusion Perceived age—which is widely used by clinicians as a general indication of a patient’s health—is a robust biomarker of ageing that predicts survival among those aged
70 and correlates with important functional and molecular ageing phenotypes.
Similar entries
- Perceived age as clinically useful biomarker of ageing: cohort study
- Efficacy of 23-valent pneumococcal vaccine in preventing pneumonia and improving survival in nursing home residents...
- Slow walking speed and cardiovascular death in well functioning older adults: prospective cohort study
- Lying obliquely—a clinical sign of cognitive impairment: cross sectional observational study
- Lying obliquely—a clinical sign of cognitive impairment: cross sectional observational study
- The association of early IQ and education with mortality: 65 year longitudinal study in Malmö, Sweden
- 'Fresh-faced people live longer'
- Impact of interval from breast conserving surgery to radiotherapy on local recurrence in older women with breast cancer
- Health and disease in 85 year olds: baseline findings from the Newcastle 85+ cohort study
- Predicting risk of osteoporotic fracture in men and women in England and Wales



