生物老化加速转变和负担与心血管疾病的关联:一项国家队列研究的纵向见解

IF 7 1区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Xin Zhang, Yu Yan, Yuxin Liu, Zixin Wang, Yuchen Jiang, Shuo Zhang, Tongda Xu, Ke Wang, Chu Zheng, Ping Zeng
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:以前的研究已经研究了生物衰老加速(BioAgeAccel)与心血管疾病(CVD)之间的关系。然而,BioAgeAccel转换和负担对CVD风险的影响尚不清楚,并且对BioAgeAccel与CVD发病年龄的关系知之甚少。方法:我们在基线分析中纳入了来自UK Biobank的316,417名参与者,在访访分析中保留了7249名参与者。BioAgeAccel被定义为生物年龄与实足年龄线性回归的残差,值越高表明衰老加速。我们根据基线和第一次随访时的衰老状态定义了BioAgeAccel过渡,并创建了三个指标来反映BioAgeAccel负担。Cox模型用于评估基线BioAgeAccel、BioAgeAccel过渡和BioAgeAccel负担与心血管事件风险的关系。采用线性模型研究它们对心血管疾病发病年龄的影响。结果:与保持稳定的非加速衰老模式的个体相比,过渡到加速衰老状态的个体心血管疾病风险增加29.8%(4.2-61.8%),而持续加速衰老的参与者心血管疾病风险增加65.5%(35.9-101.5%)。与持续加速衰老相比,从加速衰老状态逆转到非加速衰老状态可显著降低25.6%(3.9-42.3%)的风险。较高的BioAgeAccel负担与CVD的发病率增加和晚期发病相关,均大于基线BioAgeAccel的影响,累积BioAgeAccel对CVD风险的影响最大(HR = 1.26[1.07-1.47]),对CVD早期发病的贡献最显著(HR = 0.989[0.558-1.420]年)。与FRS或SCORE2负担相比,BioAgeAccel负担与更高的CVD风险相关,并且可以增强两种风险评分的预测能力。药物治疗对这些结果没有实质性影响。我们进一步发现,社会经济地位可能与BioAgeAccel负担与CVD的关联相反。结论:该研究显示,BioAgeAccel进展与较高的CVD事件风险相关,而其逆转与较低的风险相关。BioAgeAccel负担与CVD风险增加和早期发病相关,超过了基线BioAgeAccel和一些已知风险评分的影响,其中累积BioAgeAccel的影响最大。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Association of biological aging acceleration transitions and burdens with incident cardiovascular disease: longitudinal insights from a national cohort study.

Background: Previous studies have examined the association between biological aging acceleration (BioAgeAccel) and cardiovascular disease (CVD). However, the effects of BioAgeAccel transitions and burdens on CVD risk remained unclear, and little was known about the association of BioAgeAccel with age at CVD onset.

Methods: We included 316,417 participants from the UK Biobank in the baseline analyses and reserved 7249 in the visit-to-visit analyses. BioAgeAccel was defined as the residual derived from a linear regression of biological age against chronological age, with higher values indicating accelerated aging. We defined BioAgeAccel transitions based on aging status at baseline and the first follow-up, and created three indicators to reflect BioAgeAccel burdens. Cox models were used to evaluate the associations of baseline BioAgeAccel, BioAgeAccel transitions, and BioAgeAccel burdens with incident CVD risk. Linear models were employed to investigate their impacts on age at CVD onset.

Results: Compared to individuals maintaining stable non-accelerated aging patterns, those transitioning to accelerated aging status showed a 29.8% (4.2-61.8%) increased CVD risk, while participants with sustained accelerated aging demonstrated a more pronounced 65.5% (35.9-101.5%) risk elevation. Reversal from accelerated to non-accelerated aging status was associated with a significant 25.6% (3.9-42.3%) risk reduction compared to persistent accelerated aging. Higher BioAgeAccel burdens were related to enhanced incidence and advanced onset of CVD, all of which were greater than the effect of baseline BioAgeAccel, with cumulative BioAgeAccel showing the greatest influence on CVD risk (HR = 1.26 [1.07-1.47]) and the most pronounced contribution to earlier onset of CVD (0.989 [0.558-1.420] years). BioAgeAccel burdens were associated with a higher CVD risk compared to FRS or SCORE2 burdens and could enhance the predictive capacity of the two risk scores. Drug treatments did not substantially impact these results. We further discovered socioeconomic status likely antagonized the associations of BioAgeAccel burdens with CVD.

Conclusions: This study revealed BioAgeAccel progression was associated with a higher incident CVD risk, while its reversal was linked to a lower risk. BioAgeAccel burdens were associated with increased risk and earlier onset of CVD, exceeding the effects of baseline BioAgeAccel and some well-known risk scores, and cumulative BioAgeAccel exhibited the strongest impact among them.

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来源期刊
BMC Medicine
BMC Medicine 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
13.10
自引率
1.10%
发文量
435
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: BMC Medicine is an open access, transparent peer-reviewed general medical journal. It is the flagship journal of the BMC series and publishes outstanding and influential research in various areas including clinical practice, translational medicine, medical and health advances, public health, global health, policy, and general topics of interest to the biomedical and sociomedical professional communities. In addition to research articles, the journal also publishes stimulating debates, reviews, unique forum articles, and concise tutorials. All articles published in BMC Medicine are included in various databases such as Biological Abstracts, BIOSIS, CAS, Citebase, Current contents, DOAJ, Embase, MEDLINE, PubMed, Science Citation Index Expanded, OAIster, SCImago, Scopus, SOCOLAR, and Zetoc.
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