什么是蓝区?基于最成功的生物衰老模型的支持蓝区定义的论据

IF 2.2 Q3 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY
Aging Medicine Pub Date : 2024-08-12 DOI:10.1002/agm2.12343
Ivan David Lozada-Martinez, Juan-Manuel Anaya
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In recent years, the United Nations declared the period between 2021 and 2030 as the decade of healthy aging, defining four principles that have the potential to impact the human rights of healthy longevity,<span><sup>2</sup></span> and the health outcomes of older persons.<span><sup>3</sup></span> These principles, accompanied by some objectives of the World Health Organization on aging and health, propose strengthening research on healthy longevity to impact, more than life expectancy, on healthy lifespan.<span><sup>4</sup></span></p><p>The term “blue zone” was coined by Poulain et al.<span><sup>5</sup></span> who arbitrarily defined it as a geographical area with a higher proportion of male centenarians compared to female centenarians (which is commonly the opposite case) in Sardinia. Despite this, the term has been used heterogeneously in some studies on extreme longevity, referring to areas or populations with high rate of centenarians, high life expectancy/healthy lifespan, high proportion of octogenarians and nonagenarians (but not centenarians), or very low prevalence of age-related chronic diseases in aged over 80 years old.</p><p>Dan Buettner, an American explorer, and journalist, is known for disseminating information about some “well-documented” blue zones,<span><sup>6</sup></span> which can be explored through documentary films on National Geographic and the Netflix series called “Live to 100: Secrets of the Blue Zones.” These zones include Okinawa in Japan, Sardinia in Italy, Nicoya in Costa Rica, Ikaria in Greece, and Loma Linda in California.<span><sup>6</sup></span> In these documentary films, anecdotes and experiences related to lifestyles, customs, and social behaviors typical of areas, where octogenarians, nonagenarians, and centenarians with favorable health phenotypes can be found, are shared. However, just as there are similarities, there are also significant differences in the demographic and clinical characteristics of these populations, which must be examined and discussed considering the evidence.</p><p>In a nonsystematic search in PubMed, there are no more than 12 documents published to January 2024 that include the term “blue zones” in their titles. What is even more intriguing, most of the available documents are reviews or correspondences where claims are made about lessons, outcomes, and special considerations regarding extreme longevity. These analyses often include people starting from the age of 65 (who are not extreme longevity candidates).<span><sup>7</sup></span> Therefore, it is evident that the initial definition by Poulain et al.<span><sup>5</sup></span> is not being met since they exclusively referred to centenarians. Interestingly, the author of the blue zone's documentary films presents some anecdotal recommendations for reaching the chronological age of 100, specifically referring to centenarians.<span><sup>8</sup></span> However, he does refer to Poulain et al.'s initial definition<span><sup>5</sup></span> which contradicts some of his statements in the documentary films. In some instances, he also refers to areas where life expectancy is relatively high but not enough to support a representative rate of centenarians.</p><p>This analysis is worth to discus, given that not necessarily in areas where there is a significantly high rate of octogenarians or nonagenarians compared to a reference average, regardless of whether these older persons have a favorable health phenotype or not, there is a significantly high rate of centenarians.</p><p>During the execution of the Colombian Centenarians Cohort Study (COOLCEN Cohort),<span><sup>9</sup></span> we made a geographical and demographic finding that exemplifies our stance on the discrepancy in concepts regarding the use of the term “blue zones.” Through our own analysis of the 2018 National Population and Housing Census of Colombia (the latest available data on the demographic behavior of this country),<span><sup>10</sup></span> we calculated the overall and sex-differentiated rate of the population aged 85 and older, as well as centenarians per 10,000 inhabitants, for each territorial division of Colombia (32 territorial divisions and 44,164,417 inhabitants) (Figure 1). Specifically, we identified that all five territorial divisions with the highest rate of the population aged 85 and older are different from the five territorial divisions with the highest rate of centenarians per 10,000 inhabitants. It would be expected that a blue zone should be characterized by having a population pattern with extreme longevity, reflected in a high rate of both octogenarians and nonagenarians as well as centenarians. However, we did not observe this pattern in our country. Then, what defines a blue zone?</p><p>Many authors arbitrarily and heterogeneously use the term “blue zones” without an operational definition, affecting the validity, applicability, and reproducibility of results concerning longevity, centenarians, and healthy aging. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

由于世界正在经历人口结构的转型,老年人的比例急剧增加,对老龄化,特别是健 康老龄化进行详尽而严谨的研究成为当今一个非常有意义的研究领域。由于卫生系统应对这种情况的能力不确切,1 人们考虑对公共卫生和全球卫生的优先事项进行改革和调整。近年来,联合国宣布 2021 年至 2030 年为 "健康老龄化十年",并确定了有可能影响健康长寿人权2 和老年人健康成果3 的四项原则。4 "蓝区 "一词是由 Poulain 等人5 提出的,他们武断地将其定义为撒丁岛男性百岁老人比女 性百岁老人比例高的地理区域(通常情况正好相反)。尽管如此,在一些关于极度长寿的研究中,该术语的使用也不尽相同,它指的是百岁老人比例高、预期寿命/健康寿命长、八旬老人和非耄耋老人(但非百岁老人)比例高或 80 岁以上老人与年龄相关的慢性病发病率极低的地区或人群。美国探险家兼记者丹-贝特纳(Dan Buettner)以传播一些 "有据可查 "的蓝区信息而闻名,6 人们可以通过《国家地理杂志》的纪录片和 Netflix 的系列片 "活到 100 岁:蓝区的秘密 "来探索这些蓝区。这些地区包括日本冲绳、意大利撒丁岛、哥斯达黎加尼科亚、希腊伊卡里亚和加利福尼亚洛马琳达。6 在这些纪录片中,人们分享了与这些地区典型的生活方式、习俗和社会行为有关的轶事和经验,在这些地区可以找到具有良好健康表型的八旬老人、非耄耋老人和百岁老人。在 PubMed 上进行的非系统性搜索中,截至 2024 年 1 月发表的文献中,标题中包含 "蓝区 "一词的不超过 12 篇。更耐人寻味的是,现有的大多数文献都是评论或通讯,其中对有关极端长寿的教训、结果和特殊考虑进行了论述。7 因此,Poulain 等人最初的定义5 显然没有得到满足,因为他们只提到百岁老人。有趣的是,蓝色区域纪录片的作者提出了一些达到 100 岁的轶事建议,特别提到 了百岁老人。8 然而,他确实提到了 Poulain 等人的最初定义5 ,这与他在纪录片中的一 些说法相矛盾。在某些情况下,他还提到一些地区的预期寿命相对较高,但不足以支持具有代 表性的百岁老人比例。这种分析值得探讨,因为与参考平均值相比,在八旬老人或无 法达到百岁老人比例明显较高的地区,无论这些老年人是否具有良好的健康表型,百 岁老人的比例并不一定明显较高。在哥伦比亚百岁老人队列研究(COOLCEN Cohort)9 的实施过程中,我们发现了一个地理和人口方面的问题,体现了我们对使用 "蓝区 "一词的概念差异的立场。通过我们自己对 2018 年哥伦比亚全国人口和住房普查(该国人口行为的最新可用数据)10 的分析,我们计算出了哥伦比亚各领土分区(32 个领土分区和 44 164 417 名居民)85 岁及以上人口的总体比率和按性别区分的比率,以及每 10 000 名居民中的百岁老人比率(图 1)。具体而言,我们发现 85 岁及以上人口比例最高的五个行政区都与每万名居民中百岁老人比例最高的五个行政区不同。按理说,"蓝区 "的人口模式应具有极度长寿的特征,反映在八旬老人、非长寿老人和百岁老人的比例都很高。然而,我们并没有在我国观察到这种模式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

What are blue zones? An argument in favor of its definition based on the most successful model of biological aging

What are blue zones? An argument in favor of its definition based on the most successful model of biological aging

The exhaustive and rigorous study of aging, especially healthy aging, constitutes a highly interesting area of research today, due to the demographic transition the world is undergoing with a dramatic increase in the proportion of older persons. Due to the imprecise capacity of health systems to be able to respond to this scenario,1 a transformation and restructuring of priorities in public health and global health have been considered. In recent years, the United Nations declared the period between 2021 and 2030 as the decade of healthy aging, defining four principles that have the potential to impact the human rights of healthy longevity,2 and the health outcomes of older persons.3 These principles, accompanied by some objectives of the World Health Organization on aging and health, propose strengthening research on healthy longevity to impact, more than life expectancy, on healthy lifespan.4

The term “blue zone” was coined by Poulain et al.5 who arbitrarily defined it as a geographical area with a higher proportion of male centenarians compared to female centenarians (which is commonly the opposite case) in Sardinia. Despite this, the term has been used heterogeneously in some studies on extreme longevity, referring to areas or populations with high rate of centenarians, high life expectancy/healthy lifespan, high proportion of octogenarians and nonagenarians (but not centenarians), or very low prevalence of age-related chronic diseases in aged over 80 years old.

Dan Buettner, an American explorer, and journalist, is known for disseminating information about some “well-documented” blue zones,6 which can be explored through documentary films on National Geographic and the Netflix series called “Live to 100: Secrets of the Blue Zones.” These zones include Okinawa in Japan, Sardinia in Italy, Nicoya in Costa Rica, Ikaria in Greece, and Loma Linda in California.6 In these documentary films, anecdotes and experiences related to lifestyles, customs, and social behaviors typical of areas, where octogenarians, nonagenarians, and centenarians with favorable health phenotypes can be found, are shared. However, just as there are similarities, there are also significant differences in the demographic and clinical characteristics of these populations, which must be examined and discussed considering the evidence.

In a nonsystematic search in PubMed, there are no more than 12 documents published to January 2024 that include the term “blue zones” in their titles. What is even more intriguing, most of the available documents are reviews or correspondences where claims are made about lessons, outcomes, and special considerations regarding extreme longevity. These analyses often include people starting from the age of 65 (who are not extreme longevity candidates).7 Therefore, it is evident that the initial definition by Poulain et al.5 is not being met since they exclusively referred to centenarians. Interestingly, the author of the blue zone's documentary films presents some anecdotal recommendations for reaching the chronological age of 100, specifically referring to centenarians.8 However, he does refer to Poulain et al.'s initial definition5 which contradicts some of his statements in the documentary films. In some instances, he also refers to areas where life expectancy is relatively high but not enough to support a representative rate of centenarians.

This analysis is worth to discus, given that not necessarily in areas where there is a significantly high rate of octogenarians or nonagenarians compared to a reference average, regardless of whether these older persons have a favorable health phenotype or not, there is a significantly high rate of centenarians.

During the execution of the Colombian Centenarians Cohort Study (COOLCEN Cohort),9 we made a geographical and demographic finding that exemplifies our stance on the discrepancy in concepts regarding the use of the term “blue zones.” Through our own analysis of the 2018 National Population and Housing Census of Colombia (the latest available data on the demographic behavior of this country),10 we calculated the overall and sex-differentiated rate of the population aged 85 and older, as well as centenarians per 10,000 inhabitants, for each territorial division of Colombia (32 territorial divisions and 44,164,417 inhabitants) (Figure 1). Specifically, we identified that all five territorial divisions with the highest rate of the population aged 85 and older are different from the five territorial divisions with the highest rate of centenarians per 10,000 inhabitants. It would be expected that a blue zone should be characterized by having a population pattern with extreme longevity, reflected in a high rate of both octogenarians and nonagenarians as well as centenarians. However, we did not observe this pattern in our country. Then, what defines a blue zone?

Many authors arbitrarily and heterogeneously use the term “blue zones” without an operational definition, affecting the validity, applicability, and reproducibility of results concerning longevity, centenarians, and healthy aging. The study of what would be the most successful model of healthy aging in the world (centenarians), demands rigorousness, seriousness, and scientifically robust foundation to extrapolate evidence that is useful, valid, and relevant to global health objectives regarding aging and human rights in healthy aging.2, 11 Within this framework, it is a mistake to investigate and make health-related assertions using concepts of global concern lacking methodological definition and validity, impeding falsifiability and reproducibility of the obtained results.

We propose that as defined by Poulain and colleagues,5 a blue zone should be considered as the geographical area where there is a prevalence of centenarians higher than expected by demography (regardless of the centenarian's gender). This theoretically reflects an area that possesses unique characteristics, considering its population and environment, which allow the development of genuine healthy extreme longevity. This longevity is characterized by a chronological age of 100 years or older but a biological age that is younger (a slower aging process compared to the general population). Therefore, exclusive reference is made to the concept of the most successful model of healthy aging, as well as the opportunities and challenges in the care, study, and research of extreme longevity and healthy aging. Due to the relevance of this topic and the mentioned priorities, we make a call to establish an operational consensus on blue zones, based on the centenarian population, to avoid the emergence of significant biases that may affect the applicability of results regarding healthy aging.

IDLM and JMA conceptualized the study design, reviewed the literature, curated data, reviewed and confirmed abstracted data, wrote the first draft of the manuscript, and all authors reviewed and revised subsequent and finalized the draft of the manuscript.

None.

The authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose.

Not applicable.

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Aging Medicine
Aging Medicine Medicine-Geriatrics and Gerontology
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