Joint association of serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration and body mass index on the acceleration of clinical biomarker-based biological aging

Zimo Pan, Jing Zeng, Zeyu Chen, Shimin Chen, Junhan Yang, Huaihao Li, Shengshu Wang, Jianhua Wang, Nan Li, Yanping Gong, Miao Liu, Chunlin Li
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Abstract

Background The possible joint association of vitamin D and obesity in regard to the clinical biomarker-based biological aging process has not been well studied. We aimed to investigate the independent and combined associations of serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] concentrations and body mass index (BMI) with phenotypic age (PhenoAge) and Klemera-Doubal method Biological Age (KDM-BA) acceleration. Methods This study was conducted using data from participants in the UK Biobank baseline survey. PhenoAge and KDM-BA acceleration were calculated as the residuals from regressing PhenoAge and KDM-BA on chronological age. Restricted cubic splines and multivariable logistic regression analyses were used to investigate the associations of serum 25(OH)D concentrations and BMI with PhenoAge and KDM-BA acceleration. Interaction terms were introduced to evaluate whether the combined effects of the two factors exceeded their cumulative effects. Mediation analyses were conducted to assess whether PhenoAge or KDM-BA acceleration potentially mediated the association between 25(OH)D or BMI and all-cause mortality. Results In both Analysis 1 (n = 389,217) for PhenoAge, and Analysis 2 for KDM-BA (n = 329,561), participants had similar mean ages (56.49 ± 8.12 and 56.34 ± 8.13 years), sex distributions (46.7% and 46.5% men), and predominantly White ethnicity (95.0%). Consistent relationships were found between 25(OH)D, BMI and clinical biomarker-based biological age acceleration measured by PhenoAge and KDM-BA. Participants whose serum 25(OH)D concentration ≥ 50.0 nmol/L or with normal weight (BMI < 25kg/m2) had the lowest odds of clinical biomarker-based biological age acceleration. Compared to participants with serum 25(OH)D levels ≥ 50.0 nmol/L and the normal weight, participants with both 25(OH)D < 25.0 nmol/L and BMI ≥ 30.0 kg/m2 had the highest odds of PhenoAge acceleration [OR (95% CI), 2.387 (2.303, 2.474)] and KDM-BA acceleration [OR (95% CI), 4.096 (3.926, 4.274)]. The mediation analysis revealed that PhenoAge acceleration mediated 11.4% and 47.1% of the associations of 25(OH)D and BMI with all-cause mortality, while KDM-BA acceleration accounted for 7.41% and 55.2% of these associations. Conclusions Serum 25(OH)D concentrations and BMI were significantly associated with the acceleration of biological aging. Combining vitamin D deficiency and obesity demonstrated enhanced synergistic association on the biological aging process, highlighting the importance of vitamin D and BMI in promoting healthy aging.
血清25-羟基维生素D浓度与体重指数在加速临床生物标志物生物衰老中的联合作用
维生素D和肥胖在基于临床生物标志物的生物衰老过程中的可能联合关系尚未得到很好的研究。我们的目的是研究血清25-羟基维生素D [25(OH)D]浓度和体重指数(BMI)与表型年龄(PhenoAge)和klemera - double法生物年龄(KDM-BA)加速的独立和联合关系。方法本研究使用英国生物银行基线调查参与者的数据进行。将表型年龄和KDM-BA加速度作为实足年龄回归后的残差计算。使用限制三次样条和多变量logistic回归分析来研究血清25(OH)D浓度和BMI与PhenoAge和KDM-BA加速的关系。引入相互作用项来评价两个因素的综合效应是否超过它们的累积效应。进行了中介分析,以评估表型或KDM-BA加速是否可能介导25(OH)D或BMI与全因死亡率之间的关联。结果在分析1 (n = 389217)和分析2 (n = 329561)中,研究对象的平均年龄(56.49±8.12岁和56.34±8.13岁)、性别分布(46.7%和46.5%男性)相似,且以白人为主(95.0%)。25(OH)D、BMI和基于临床生物标志物的生物年龄加速(由PhenoAge和KDM-BA测量)之间存在一致的关系。血清25(OH)D浓度≥50.0 nmol/L或体重正常(BMI≤25kg/m2)的受试者出现基于临床生物标志物的生物年龄加速的几率最低。与血清25(OH)D水平≥50.0 nmol/L和体重正常的受试者相比,25(OH)D和25(OH)D水平均高于正常水平的受试者;25.0 nmol/L和BMI≥30.0 kg/m2的患者的表型加速几率最高[OR (95% CI), 2.387 (2.303, 2.474)], KDM-BA加速几率最高[OR (95% CI), 4.096(3.926, 4.274)]。中介分析显示,表型加速介导25(OH)D和BMI与全因死亡率的关联分别为11.4%和47.1%,而KDM-BA加速介导25(OH)D和BMI与全因死亡率的关联分别为7.41%和55.2%。结论血清25(OH)D浓度和BMI与生物衰老的加速有显著相关性。维生素D缺乏和肥胖在生物衰老过程中表现出增强的协同关联,突出了维生素D和BMI在促进健康衰老中的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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