187 results on '"Newman, Anne B."'
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2. Relationships Between Level and Change in Sarcopenia and Other Body Composition Components and Adverse Health Outcomes: Findings from the Health, Aging, and Body Composition Study
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Westbury, Leo D., Syddall, Holly E., Fuggle, Nicholas R., Dennison, Elaine M., Harvey, Nicholas C., Cauley, Jane A., Shiroma, Eric J., Fielding, Roger A., Newman, Anne B., and Cooper, Cyrus
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- 2021
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3. Role of Cardiorespiratory Fitness and Mitochondrial Oxidative Capacity in Reduced Walk Speed of Older Adults With Diabetes.
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Ramos, Sofhia V., Distefano, Giovanna, Lui, Li-Yung, Cawthon, Peggy M., Kramer, Philip, Sipula, Ian J., Bello, Fiona M., Mau, Theresa, Jurczak, Michael J., Molina, Anthony J., Kershaw, Erin E., Marcinek, David J., Shankland, Eric, Toledo, Frederico G.S., Newman, Anne B., Hepple, Russell T., Kritchevsky, Stephen B., Goodpaster, Bret H., Cummings, Steven R., and Coen, Paul M.
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WALKING speed ,CARDIOPULMONARY fitness ,OLDER people ,FITNESS walking ,DIABETES - Abstract
Cardiorespiratory fitness and mitochondrial oxidative capacity are associated with reduced walking speed in older adults, but their impact on walking speed in older adults with diabetes has not been clearly defined. We examined differences in cardiorespiratory fitness and skeletal muscle mitochondrial oxidative capacity between older adults with and without diabetes, as well as determined their relative contribution to slower walking speed in older adults with diabetes. Participants with diabetes (n = 159) had lower cardiorespiratory fitness and mitochondrial respiration in permeabilized fiber bundles compared with those without diabetes (n = 717), following adjustments for covariates including BMI, chronic comorbid health conditions, and physical activity. Four-meter and 400-m walking speeds were slower in those with diabetes. Mitochondrial oxidative capacity alone or combined with cardiorespiratory fitness mediated ∼20–70% of the difference in walking speed between older adults with and without diabetes. Additional adjustments for BMI and comorbidities further explained the group differences in walking speed. Cardiorespiratory fitness and skeletal muscle mitochondrial oxidative capacity contribute to slower walking speeds in older adults with diabetes. Article Highlights: The contributors to slower walking speed in older adults with diabetes remain unclear. This study was conducted to answer the question of how mitochondrial oxidative capacity and cardiorespiratory fitness impact walking speed in older adults with diabetes. We found that mitochondrial oxidative capacity, cardiorespiratory fitness, and walking speed were lower in older adults with diabetes compared with those without diabetes. In addition, mitochondrial oxidative capacity and cardiorespiratory fitness contributed to slower walking speed in those with diabetes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Muscle Mitochondrial Bioenergetic Capacities Are Associated With Multimorbidity Burden in Older Adults: The Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging.
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Mau, Theresa, Blackwell, Terri L, Cawthon, Peggy M, Molina, Anthony J A, Coen, Paul M, Distefano, Giovanna, Kramer, Philip A, Ramos, Sofhia V, Forman, Daniel E, Goodpaster, Bret H, Toledo, Frederico G S, Duchowny, Kate A, Sparks, Lauren M, Newman, Anne B, Kritchevsky, Stephen B, and Cummings, Steven R
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OLDER people ,COMORBIDITY ,MITOCHONDRIA ,CHRONIC obstructive pulmonary disease ,PRESBYCUSIS ,AGING ,MITOCHONDRIAL pathology - Abstract
Background The geroscience hypothesis posits that aging biological processes contribute to many age-related deficits, including the accumulation of multiple chronic diseases. Though only one facet of mitochondrial function, declines in muscle mitochondrial bioenergetic capacities may contribute to this increased susceptibility to multimorbidity. Methods The Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging (SOMMA) assessed ex vivo muscle mitochondrial energetics in 764 older adults (mean age = 76.4, 56.5% women, and 85.9% non-Hispanic White) by high-resolution respirometry of permeabilized muscle fibers. We estimated the proportional odds ratio (POR [95% CI]) for the likelihood of greater multimorbidity (4 levels: 0 conditions, N = 332; 1 condition, N = 299; 2 conditions, N = 98; or 3+ conditions, N = 35) from an index of 11 conditions, per SD decrement in muscle mitochondrial energetic parameters. Distribution of conditions allowed for testing the associations of maximal muscle energetics with some individual conditions. Results Lower oxidative phosphorylation supported by fatty acids and/or complex I- and II-linked carbohydrates (eg, Max OXPHOS
CI+CII ) was associated with a greater multimorbidity index score (POR = 1.32 [1.13, 1.54]) and separately with diabetes mellitus (OR = 1.62 [1.26, 2.09]), depressive symptoms (OR = 1.45 [1.04, 2.00]) and possibly chronic kidney disease (OR = 1.57 [0.98, 2.52]) but not significantly with other conditions (eg, cardiac arrhythmia, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease). Conclusions Lower muscle mitochondrial bioenergetic capacities were associated with a worse composite multimorbidity index score. Our results suggest that decrements in muscle mitochondrial energetics may contribute to a greater global burden of disease and are more strongly related to some conditions than others. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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5. Percutaneous biopsies of skeletal muscle and adipose tissue in individuals older than 70: methods and outcomes in the Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging (SOMMA).
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Zamora, Zeke, Lui, Li-Yung, Sparks, Lauren M., Justice, Jamie, Lyles, Mary, Gentle, Landon, Gregory, Heather, Yeo, Reichelle X., Kershaw, Erin E., Stefanovic-Racic, Maja, Newman, Anne B., Kritchevsky, Stephen, and Toledo, Frederico G. S.
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OLDER people ,ADIPOSE tissues ,SKELETAL muscle ,VASTUS lateralis ,TISSUE analysis ,FRAIL elderly - Abstract
Biopsies of muscle and adipose tissue (AT) are useful tools to gain insights into the aging processes in these tissues. However, they are invasive procedures and their risk/benefit profile in older adults can be altered by sarcopenia, frailty, poor healing, and multimorbidity. Their success rates, safety, and tolerability in a geriatric population have not been reported in detail. Investigators in the Study of Muscle, Mobility, and Aging (SOMMA) performed biopsies of muscle and AT in older adults and prospectively collected data on biopsy success rates, safety, and tolerability. We report here the methods and outcomes of these two procedures. In total, 861 participants (aged 70–94) underwent percutaneous biopsies of the Vastus lateralis muscle with a Bergstrom needle. A subset (n = 241) also underwent percutaneous biopsies of the abdominal subcutaneous AT with the tumescent liposuction technique. Success rate was assessed by the percentage of biopsies yielding adequate specimens for analyses; tolerability by pain scores; and safety by frequency of adverse events. All data were prospectively collected. The overall muscle biopsy success rate was 97.1% and was modestly lower in women. The AT biopsy success rate was 95.9% and slightly lower in men. Minimal or no pain was reported in 68% of muscle biopsies and in 83% of AT biopsies. Adverse events occurred in 2.67% of muscle biopsies and 4.15% of AT biopsies. None was serious. In older adults, percutaneous muscle biopsies and abdominal subcutaneous AT biopsies have an excellent safety profile, often achieve adequate tissue yields for analyses, and are well tolerated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Autophagy gene expression in skeletal muscle of older individuals is associated with physical performance, muscle volume and mitochondrial function in the study of muscle, mobility and aging (SOMMA).
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Coen, Paul M., Huo, Zhiguang, Tranah, Gregory J., Barnes, Haley N., Zhang, Xiping, Wolff, Christopher A., Wu, Kevin, Cawthon, Peggy M., Hepple, Russell T., Toledo, Frederico G. S., Evans, Daniel S., Santiago‐Fernández, Olaya, Cuervo, Ana Maria, Kritchevsky, Stephen B., Newman, Anne B., Cummings, Steven R., and Esser, Karyn A.
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OLDER people ,PHYSICAL mobility ,GENE expression ,AUTOPHAGY ,MITOCHONDRIA ,LEG muscles ,SKELETAL muscle - Abstract
Autophagy is essential for proteostasis, energetic balance, and cell defense and is a key pathway in aging. Identifying associations between autophagy gene expression patterns in skeletal muscle and physical performance outcomes would further our knowledge of mechanisms related with proteostasis and healthy aging. Muscle biopsies were obtained from participants in the Study of Muscle, Mobility, and Aging (SOMMA). For 575 participants, RNA was sequenced and expression of 281 genes related to autophagy regulation, mitophagy, and mTOR/upstream pathways was determined. Associations between gene expression and outcomes including mitochondrial respiration in muscle fiber bundles (MAX OXPHOS), physical performance (VO2 peak, 400 m walking speed, and leg power), and thigh muscle volume, were determined using negative binomial regression models. For autophagy, key transcriptional regulators including TFE3 and NFKB‐related genes (RELA, RELB, and NFKB1) were negatively associated with outcomes. On the contrary, regulators of oxidative metabolism that also promote overall autophagy, mitophagy, and pexophagy (PPARGC1A, PPARA, and EPAS1) were positively associated with multiple outcomes. In line with this, several mitophagy, fusion, and fission‐related genes (NIPSNAP2, DNM1L, and OPA1) were also positively associated with outcomes. For mTOR pathway and related genes, expression of WDR59 and WDR24, both subunits of GATOR2 complex (an indirect inhibitor of mTORC1), and PRKAG3, which is a regulatory subunit of AMPK, were negatively correlated with multiple outcomes. Our study identifies autophagy and selective autophagy such as mitophagy gene expression patterns in human skeletal muscle related to physical performance, muscle volume, and mitochondrial function in older persons which may lead to target identification to preserve mobility and independence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Associations between skeletal muscle energetics and accelerometry‐based performance fatigability: Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging.
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Qiao, Yujia, Santanasto, Adam J., Coen, Paul M., Cawthon, Peggy M., Cummings, Steven R., Forman, Daniel E., Goodpaster, Bret H., Harezlak, Jaroslaw, Hawkins, Marquis, Kritchevsky, Stephen B., Nicklas, Barbara J., Toledo, Frederico G. S., Toto, Pamela E., Newman, Anne B., and Glynn, Nancy W.
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WRIST ,SKELETAL muscle ,NUCLEAR magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,AGING ,OLDER people ,PERFORMANCE theory - Abstract
Performance fatigability is typically experienced as insufficient energy to complete daily physical tasks, particularly with advancing age, often progressing toward dependency. Thus, understanding the etiology of performance fatigability, especially cellular‐level biological mechanisms, may help to delay the onset of mobility disability. We hypothesized that skeletal muscle energetics may be important contributors to performance fatigability. Participants in the Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging completed a usual‐paced 400‐m walk wearing a wrist‐worn ActiGraph GT9X to derive the Pittsburgh Performance Fatigability Index (PPFI, higher scores = more severe fatigability) that quantifies percent decline in individual cadence‐versus‐time trajectory from their maximal cadence. Complex I&II‐supported maximal oxidative phosphorylation (max OXPHOS) and complex I&II‐supported electron transfer system (max ETS) were quantified ex vivo using high‐resolution respirometry in permeabilized fiber bundles from vastus lateralis muscle biopsies. Maximal adenosine triphosphate production (ATPmax) was assessed in vivo by 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy. We conducted tobit regressions to examine associations of max OXPHOS, max ETS, and ATPmax with PPFI, adjusting for technician/site, demographic characteristics, and total activity count over 7‐day free‐living among older adults (N = 795, 70–94 years, 58% women) with complete PPFI scores and ≥1 energetics measure. Median PPFI score was 1.4% [25th–75th percentile: 0%–2.9%]. After full adjustment, each 1 standard deviation lower max OXPHOS, max ETS, and ATPmax were associated with 0.55 (95% CI: 0.26–0.84), 0.39 (95% CI: 0.09–0.70), and 0.54 (95% CI: 0.27–0.81) higher PPFI score, respectively. Our findings suggested that therapeutics targeting muscle energetics may potentially mitigate fatigability and lessen susceptibility to disability among older adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Signatures of cysteine oxidation on muscle structural and contractile proteins are associated with physical performance and muscle function in older adults: Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging (SOMMA).
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Day, Nicholas J., Kelly, Shane S., Lui, Li‐Yung, Mansfield, Tyler A., Gaffrey, Matthew J., Trejo, Jesse B., Sagendorf, Tyler J., Attah, Isaac K., Moore, Ronald J., Douglas, Collin M., Newman, Anne B., Kritchevsky, Stephen B., Kramer, Philip A., Marcinek, David J., Coen, Paul M., Goodpaster, Bret H., Hepple, Russell T., Cawthon, Peggy M., Petyuk, Vladislav A., and Esser, Karyn A.
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CONTRACTILE proteins ,CYTOSKELETAL proteins ,OLDER people ,PHYSICAL mobility ,MUSCLE proteins ,LEG muscles - Abstract
Oxidative stress is considered a contributor to declining muscle function and mobility during aging; however, the underlying molecular mechanisms remain poorly described. We hypothesized that greater levels of cysteine (Cys) oxidation on muscle proteins are associated with decreased measures of mobility. Herein, we applied a novel redox proteomics approach to measure reversible protein Cys oxidation in vastus lateralis muscle biopsies collected from 56 subjects in the Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging (SOMMA), a community‐based cohort study of individuals aged 70 years and older. We tested whether levels of Cys oxidation on key muscle proteins involved in muscle structure and contraction were associated with muscle function (leg power and strength), walking speed, and fitness (VO2 peak on cardiopulmonary exercise testing) using linear regression models adjusted for age, sex, and body weight. Higher oxidation levels of select nebulin Cys sites were associated with lower VO2 peak, while greater oxidation of myomesin‐1, myomesin‐2, and nebulin Cys sites was associated with slower walking speed. Higher oxidation of Cys sites in key proteins such as myomesin‐2, alpha‐actinin‐2, and skeletal muscle alpha‐actin were associated with lower leg power and strength. We also observed an unexpected correlation (R = 0.48) between a higher oxidation level of eight Cys sites in alpha‐actinin‐3 and stronger leg power. Despite this observation, the results generally support the hypothesis that Cys oxidation of muscle proteins impairs muscle power and strength, walking speed, and cardiopulmonary fitness with aging. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. The association between chrononutrition behaviors and muscle health among older adults: The study of muscle, mobility and aging.
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Mao, Ziling, Cawthon, Peggy M., Kritchevsky, Stephen B., Toledo, Frederico G. S., Esser, Karyn A., Erickson, Melissa L., Newman, Anne B., and Farsijani, Samaneh
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HEALTH behavior ,OLDER people ,MOBILITY of older people ,MUSCLE mass ,BODY composition ,LEG muscles ,AGING ,GRIP strength ,SARCOPENIA - Abstract
Emerging studies highlight chrononutrition's impact on body composition through circadian clock entrainment, but its effect on older adults' muscle health remains largely overlooked. To determine the associations between chrononutrition behaviors and muscle health in older adults. Dietary data from 828 older adults (76 ± 5 years) recorded food/beverage amounts and their clock time over the past 24 h. Studied chrononutrition behaviors included: (1) The clock time of the first and last food/beverage intake; (2) Eating window (the time elapsed between the first and last intake); and (3) Eating frequency (Number of self‐identified eating events logged with changed meal occasion and clock time). Muscle mass (D3‐creatine), leg muscle volume (MRI), grip strength (hand‐held dynamometer), and leg power (Keiser) were used as outcomes. We used linear regression to assess the relationships between chrononutrition and muscle health, adjusting for age, sex, race, marital status, education, study site, self‐reported health, energy, protein, fiber intake, weight, height, and moderate‐to‐vigorous physical activity. Average eating window was 11 ± 2 h/day; first and last intake times were at 8:22 and 19:22, respectively. After multivariable adjustment, a longer eating window and a later last intake time were associated with greater muscle mass (β ± SE: 0.18 ± 0.09; 0.27 ± 0.11, respectively, p < 0.05). The longer eating window was also marginally associated with higher leg power (p = 0.058). An earlier intake time was associated with higher grip strength (−0.38 ± 0.15; p = 0.012). Chrononutrition behaviors, including longer eating window, later last intake time, and earlier first intake time were associated with better muscle mass and function in older adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Associations Between D3Cr Muscle Mass and Magnetic Resonance Thigh Muscle Volume With Strength, Power, Physical Performance, Fitness, and Limitations in Older Adults in the SOMMA Study.
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Cawthon, Peggy M, Blackwell, Terri L, Kritchevsky, Stephen B, Newman, Anne B, Hepple, Russell T, Coen, Paul M, Goodpaster, Bret H, Duchowny, Kate, Hetherington-Rauth, Megan, Mau, Theresa, Shankaran, Mahalakshmi, Hellerstein, Marc, Evans, William J, and Cummings, Steven R
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MUSCLE mass ,OLDER people ,MAGNETIC resonance ,PHYSICAL mobility ,MUSCLE strength ,THIGH - Abstract
Background How magnetic resonance (MR) derived thigh muscle volume and deuterated creatine dilution derived muscle mass (D
3 Cr muscle mass) differentially relate to strength, fitness, and other functions in older adults—and whether associations vary by sex—is not known. Methods Men (N = 345) and women (N = 482) aged ≥70 years from the Study of Muscle, Mobility, and Aging completed leg extension strength (1-repetition max) and cardiopulmonary exercise testing to assess fitness (VO2 peak). Correlations and adjusted regression models stratified by sex were used to assess the association between muscle size measures, study outcomes, and sex interactions. Results D3 Cr muscle mass and MR thigh muscle volume were correlated (men: r = 0.62, women: r = 0.51, p < .001). Each standard deviation (SD) decrement in D3 Cr muscle mass was associated with lower 1-repetition max strength (−14 kg men, −4 kg women, p < .001 for both; p -interaction = .003) and lower VO2 peak (−79 mL/min men, −30 mL/min women, p < .001 for both, p -interaction:.016). Each SD decrement in MR thigh muscle volume was also associated with lower strength (−32 kg men, −20 kg women, p < .001 for both; p -interaction = .139) and lower VO2 peak (−217 mL/min men, −111 mL/min women, p < .001 for both, p -interaction = .010). There were associations, though less consistent, between muscle size or mass with physical performance and function; associations varied by sex. Conclusions Less muscle—measured by either D3 Cr muscle mass or MR thigh muscle volume—was associated with lower strength and fitness. Varied associations by sex and assessment method suggest consideration be given to which measurement to use in future studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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11. Age Is Associated With Dampened Circadian Patterns of Rest and Activity: The Study of Muscle, Mobility, and Aging (SOMMA).
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Erickson, Melissa L, Blackwell, Terri L, Mau, Theresa, Cawthon, Peggy M, Glynn, Nancy W, Qiao, Yujia (Susanna), Cummings, Steven R, Coen, Paul M, Lane, Nancy E, Kritchevsky, Stephen B, Newman, Anne B, Farsijani, Samaneh, and Esser, Karyn A
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CIRCADIAN rhythms ,OLDER people ,AGING ,PRINCIPAL components analysis ,SUCCESSFUL aging - Abstract
Background The effects of aging on circadian patterns of behavior are insufficiently described. To address this, we characterized age-specific features of rest-activity rhythms (RAR) in community-dwelling older adults both overall, and in relation, to sociodemographic characteristics. Methods We examined cross-sectional associations between RAR and age, sex, race, education, multimorbidity burden, financial, work, martial, health, and smoking status using assessments of older adults with wrist-worn free-living actigraphy data (N = 820, age = 76.4 years, 58.2% women) participating in the Study of Muscle, Mobility, and Aging (SOMMA). RAR parameters were determined by mapping an extension to the traditional cosine curve to activity data. Functional principal component analysis determined variables accounting for variance. Results Age was associated with several metrics of dampened RAR; women had stronger and more robust RAR versus men (all p < .05). Total activity (56%) and time of activity (20%) accounted for most of the RAR variance. Compared to the latest decile of acrophase, those in the earliest decile had higher average amplitude (p < .001). Compared to the latest decile of acrophase, those in the earliest and midrange categories had more total activity (p = .02). Being in a married-like relationship and a more stable financial situation were associated with stronger rhythms; higher education was associated with less rhythm strength (all p < .05). Conclusions Older age was associated with dampened circadian behavior; behaviors were sexually dimorphic. Some sociodemographic characteristics were associated with circadian behavior. We identified a behavioral phenotype characterized by early time of day of peak activity, high rhythmic amplitude, and more total activity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Skeletal Muscle Energetics Explain the Sex Disparity in Mobility Impairment in the Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging.
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Kramer, Philip A, Coen, Paul M, Cawthon, Peggy M, Distefano, Giovanna, Cummings, Steven R, Goodpaster, Bret H, Hepple, Russell T, Kritchevsky, Stephen B, Shankland, Eric G, Marcinek, David J, Toledo, Frederico G S, Duchowny, Kate A, Ramos, Sofhia V, Harrison, Stephanie, Newman, Anne B, and Molina, Anthony J A
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SKELETAL muscle ,NUCLEAR magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,AGE groups ,VASTUS lateralis ,OLDER people - Abstract
The age-related decline in muscle mitochondrial energetics contributes to the loss of mobility in older adults. Women experience a higher prevalence of mobility impairment compared to men, but it is unknown whether sex-specific differences in muscle energetics underlie this disparity. In the Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging (SOMMA), muscle energetics were characterized using in vivo phosphorus-31 magnetic resonance spectroscopy and high-resolution respirometry of vastus lateralis biopsies in 773 participants (56.4% women, age 70–94 years). A Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB) score ≤8 was used to define lower-extremity mobility impairment. Muscle mitochondrial energetics were lower in women compared to men (eg, Maximal Complex I&II OXPHOS: Women = 55.06 ± 15.95; Men = 65.80 ± 19.74; p < .001) and in individuals with mobility impairment compared to those without (eg, Maximal Complex I&II OXPHOS in women: SPPB ≥ 9 = 56.59 ± 16.22; SPPB ≤ 8 = 47.37 ± 11.85; p < .001). Muscle energetics were negatively associated with age only in men (eg, Maximal ETS capacity: R = −0.15, p = .02; age/sex interaction, p = .04), resulting in muscle energetics measures that were significantly lower in women than men in the 70–79 age group but not the 80+ age group. Similarly, the odds of mobility impairment were greater in women than men only in the 70–79 age group (70–79 age group, odds ratio [OR]
age-adjusted = 1.78, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.03, 3.08, p = .038; 80+ age group, ORage-adjusted = 1.05, 95% CI = 0.52, 2.15, p = .89). Accounting for muscle energetics attenuated up to 75% of the greater odds of mobility impairment in women. Women had lower muscle mitochondrial energetics compared to men, which largely explain their greater odds of lower-extremity mobility impairment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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13. The Association of Skeletal Muscle Energetics With Recurrent Falls in Older Adults Within the Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging.
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Kramer, Philip A, Zamora, Ezequiel, Barnes, Haley N, Strotmeyer, Elsa S, Glynn, Nancy W, Lane, Nancy E, Coen, Paul M, Cawthon, Peggy M, Goodpaster, Bret H, Newman, Anne B, Kritchevsky, Stephen B, and Cummings, Steven R
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OLDER people ,SKELETAL muscle ,NUCLEAR magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,AGING ,VASTUS lateralis - Abstract
Background Falls in the older population are a major public health concern. While many physiological and environmental factors have been associated with fall risk, muscle mitochondrial energetics has not yet been investigated. Methods In this analysis, 835 Study of Muscle, Mobility and Aging (SOMMA) participants aged 70–94 were surveyed for number of falls (total), recurrent falls (2+), and fall-related injuries over the past 12 months at baseline and again after 1 year. Skeletal muscle energetics were assessed at baseline in vivo using
31 P Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy for the maximal rate of adenosine triphosphate recovery (ATPmax) after an acute bout of exercise, and ex vivo by High-Resolution Respirometry for the maximal rate of complex I and II supported oxygen consumption (MaxOXPHOS) in permeabilized muscle fibers from the vastus lateralis. Results At least 1 fall was reported in 28.7% of SOMMA participants in the first year of the study, with 12% of older adults reporting recurrent falls (2+). Individuals who experienced recurrent falls had a slower 400-m walk gait speed (1.0 ± 0.2 vs 1.1 ± 0.2, p <.001), reported fewer alcoholic drinks per week in the past year (2.4 ± 4.3 vs 2.8 ± 4.4, p =.054), and took a significantly greater number of medication in the 30 days before their baseline visit (5.6 ± 4.4 vs 4.2 ± 3.4, p <.05). A history of falls was reported in 63% of individuals who experienced recurrent falls in the first year of the study compared to 22.8% who experienced 1 or fewer falls. MaxOXPHOS was significantly lower in those who reported recurrent falls (p =.008) compared to those with 1 or fewer falls, but there was no significant difference in ATPmax (p =.369). Neither muscle energetics measure was significantly associated with total number of falls or injurious falls, but recurrent falls were significantly higher with lower MaxOXPHOS (risk ratio = 1.33, 95% confidence interval = 1.02–1.73, p =.033). However, covariates accounted for the increased risk. Conclusions Mitochondrial energetics were largely unrelated to fall risk in older adults when accounting for variables, suggesting that the complex etiology of falls may not be related to a single "hallmark of aging" biological pathway. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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14. Vigor to Frailty As a Continuum—A New Approach in the Study of Muscle, Mobility, and Aging Cohort.
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Newman, Anne B, Blackwell, Terri L, Mau, Theresa, Cawthon, Peggy M, Coen, Paul M, Cummings, Steven R, Toledo, Frederico G S, Goodpaster, Bret H, Glynn, Nancy W, Hepple, Russell T, and Kritchevsky, Stephen B
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OLDER people , *FRAILTY - Abstract
Background Frailty can occur in older adults without disability or multimorbidity. Current methods focus on the most frail, but poorly discriminate among those "not frail." Methods The Study of Muscle, Mobility, and Aging (SOMMA) included 879 adults aged 70 years and older without mobility disability. We operationalized frailty domains using: peak oxygen consumption (endurance), digit symbol substitution test (speed), leg power (strength), perceived fatigability, D3 creatine dilution (sarcopenia), and accelerometry (sedentary behavior) to construct a frailty score of 0–12 summing tertiles (0–2) of each component. We used linear or logistic regression with and without adjustment for confounders to examine associations with age, reported, and performance function. Results The SOMMA frailty score distribution was broad and strongly associated with age (r = 0.33, p < .0001). Each point was associated with a 30%–50% higher odds of having reported difficulty with activities of daily living or mobility. After grouping the total score (0–3, 4–7, and 8–12) those in the highest group were 9–31 times more likely to have functional limitation, and at least 8 times more likely to have poorer function after full adjustment. Higher scores identified those less likely to report ease of walking or higher physical activity. Peak oxygen consumption, leg power, fatigability, and digit symbol score contributed most to these associations. Conclusions The SOMMA frailty score characterizes frailty as a continuum from frail to vigorous with assessments that are amenable to change. Associations with age and function suggest utility for distinguishing a wide range of vigor and vulnerability in relatively well-functioning older adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. The Health, Aging, and Body Composition (Health ABC) Study—Ground-Breaking Science for 25 Years and Counting.
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Newman, Anne B, Visser, Marjolein, Kritchevsky, Stephen B, Simonsick, Eleanor, Cawthon, Peggy M, and Harris, Tamara B
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BODY composition , *LEAN body mass , *ADIPOSE tissues , *OLDER people , *CAREER development - Abstract
Background The Health, Aging, and Body Composition Study is a longitudinal cohort study that started just over 25 years ago. This ground-breaking study tested specific hypotheses about the importance of weight, body composition, and weight-related health conditions for incident functional limitation in older adults. Methods Narrative review with analysis of ancillary studies, career awards, publications, and citations. Results Key findings of the study demonstrated the importance of body composition as a whole, both fat and lean mass, in the disablement pathway. The quality of the muscle in terms of its strength and its composition was found to be a critical feature in defining sarcopenia. Dietary patterns and especially protein intake, social factors, and cognition were found to be critical elements for functional limitation and disability. The study is highly cited and its assessments have been widely adopted in both observational studies and clinical trials. Its impact continues as a platform for collaboration and career development. Conclusions The Health ABC provides a knowledge base for the prevention of disability and promotion of mobility in older adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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16. Proteomic architecture of frailty across the spectrum of cardiovascular disease.
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Perry, Andrew S., Zhao, Shilin, Gajjar, Priya, Murthy, Venkatesh L., Lehallier, Benoit, Miller, Patricia, Nair, Sangeeta, Neill, Colin, Carr, J. Jeffrey, Fearon, William, Kapadia, Samir, Kumbhani, Dharam, Gillam, Linda, Lindenfeld, JoAnn, Farrell, Laurie, Marron, Megan M., Tian, Qu, Newman, Anne B., Murabito, Joanne, and Gerszten, Robert E.
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IMMUNOSENESCENCE ,HEART valve prosthesis implantation ,FRAILTY ,CARDIOVASCULAR diseases ,PROTEOMICS ,OLDER people - Abstract
While frailty is a prominent risk factor in an aging population, the underlying biology of frailty is incompletely described. Here, we integrate 979 circulating proteins across a wide range of physiologies with 12 measures of frailty in a prospective discovery cohort of 809 individuals with severe aortic stenosis (AS) undergoing transcatheter aortic valve implantation. Our aim was to characterize the proteomic architecture of frailty in a highly susceptible population and study its relation to clinical outcome and systems‐wide phenotypes to define potential novel, clinically relevant frailty biology. Proteomic signatures (specifically of physical function) were related to post‐intervention outcome in AS, specifying pathways of innate immunity, cell growth/senescence, fibrosis/metabolism, and a host of proteins not widely described in human aging. In published cohorts, the "frailty proteome" displayed heterogeneous trajectories across age (20–100 years, age only explaining a small fraction of variance) and were associated with cardiac and non‐cardiac phenotypes and outcomes across two broad validation cohorts (N > 35,000) over ≈2–3 decades. These findings suggest the importance of precision biomarkers of underlying multi‐organ health status in age‐related morbidity and frailty. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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17. Associations Between Circulating Levels of Myostatin and Plasma β-Amyloid 42/40 in a Biracial Cohort of Older Adults.
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McNeish, Brendan L, Miljkovic, Iva, Zhu, Xiaonan, Cawthon, Peggy M, Newman, Anne B, Goodpaster, Bret, Yaffe, Kristine, and Rosano, Caterina
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MYOSTATIN ,OLDER people ,CEREBRAL amyloid angiopathy ,ALZHEIMER'S disease ,RACE ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Background Myostatin, a cytokine produced by skeletal muscle, may influence Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathogenesis, but sparse evidence exists in humans. We assessed the association between circulating levels of myostatin at Year 1 and plasma levels of β-amyloid 42/40 at Year 2, a marker of AD pathology, in a biracial cohort of older adults. Methods We studied 403 community-dwelling older adults enrolled in the Health, Aging and Body Composition Study from Memphis, Tennessee, and Pittsburgh, PA. Mean age was 73.8 ± 3 years; 54% were female; and 52% were Black. Serum myostatin levels were measured at Year 1, plasma β-amyloid 42/40 levels in Year 2 (higher ratio indicating lower amyloid load). Multivariable linear regression analyses tested the association of serum myostatin with plasma levels of β-amyloid 42/40 adjusted for computed-tomography-derived thigh muscle cross-sectional area, demographics, APOe4 allele, and risk factors for dementia. We tested for 2-way.interactions between myostatin and race or sex; results were stratified by race and sex. Results In multivariable models, myostatin was positively associated with plasma levels of β-amyloid 42/40 (standardized regression coefficient: 0.145, p =.004). Results were significant for white men and women (0.279, p =.009, and 0.221, p =.035, respectively) but not for Black men or women; interactions by race and gender were not statistically significant. Conclusions Higher serum myostatin was associated with lower amyloid burden, independently of APOe4 alleles, muscle area and other established risk factors for dementia. The role of myostatin in AD pathogenesis and the influence of race should be further investigated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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18. The Associations of Individual and Subclasses of Nonesterified Fatty Acids With Disability, and Mobility Limitation in Older Adults: The Cardiovascular Health Study.
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Ahiawodzi, Peter D, Buzkova, Petra, Lichtenstein, Alice H, Matthan, Nirupa R, Ix, Joachim H, Kizer, Jorge R, Tracy, Russell P, Arnold, Alice, Newman, Anne B, Siscovick, David, Djousse, Luc, and Mukamal, Kenneth J
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FREE fatty acids ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,MOBILITY of older people ,OLDER people ,OMEGA-6 fatty acids ,UNSATURATED fatty acids ,PROPORTIONAL hazards models - Abstract
Background We sought to determine the associations between individual nonesterified fatty acids (NEFAs) and disability and mobility limitation. Methods We studied 1 734 participants in the Cardiovascular Health Study (CHS), an ongoing population-based cohort study of community-living older American adults. We measured 35 individual NEFA species in fasting serum samples obtained at the 1996–1997 clinic visit. Using yearly assessments of activities of daily living and self-reported mobility, we identified participants with incident disability or mobility limitation during 15 years of follow-up. Cox proportional hazards regression models were used to determine the associations between per SD increment in the individual NEFAs and incident disability and mobility limitations with adjustment for potential confounding factors. Results Higher concentrations of total and a broad range of individual NEFA species were associated with risk of disability and mobility limitation (disability: HR per SD of total NEFA [ SD = 174.70] = 1.11, 95% CI = 1.04–1.18, p = .001; mobility limitation: HR per SD of total NEFA = 1.09, 95% CI = 1.02–1.16, p = .01). Among individual saturated NEFAs (SFAs), myristic (14:0) and palmitic (16:0) acids were significantly associated with higher risk of both disability and mobility limitations, but longer-chain FAs were not. Most individual monounsaturated (MUFA), n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), and trans FAs were positively significantly associated with higher risks of both disability and mobility limitation. In contrast, most n-3 PUFA species were not associated with disability or mobility limitation. Conclusions Higher risks of disability and mobility limitation were observed for proinflammatory intermediate-chain SFAs, MUFAs, n-6 PUFAs, and trans FAs. Our findings indicated no significant association for anti-inflammatory n-3 PUFAs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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19. Optimizing the Design of Clinical Trials to Evaluate the Efficacy of Function-Promoting Therapies.
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Bhasin, Shalender, Cawthon, Peggy M, Correa-de-Araujo, Rosaly, Storer, Thomas W, Volpi, Elena, Newman, Anne B, Dioh, Waly, Tourette, Cendrine, Evans, William J, and Fielding, Roger A
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EXPERIMENTAL design ,MUSCLE mass ,FUNCTIONAL training ,FUNCTIONAL status ,OLDER people - Abstract
Background Several candidate molecules that may have application in treating physical limitations associated with aging and chronic diseases are in development. Challenges in the framing of indications, eligibility criteria, and endpoints and the lack of regulatory guidance have hindered the development of function-promoting therapies. Methods Experts from academia, pharmaceutical industry, National Institutes of Health (NIH), and Food and Drug Administration (FDA) discussed optimization of trial design including the framing of indications, eligibility criteria, and endpoints. Results Mobility disability associated with aging and chronic diseases is an attractive indication because it is recognized by geriatricians as a common condition associated with adverse outcomes, and it can be ascertained reliably. Other conditions associated with functional limitation in older adults include hospitalization for acute illnesses, cancer cachexia, and fall injuries. Efforts are underway to harmonize definitions of sarcopenia and frailty. Eligibility criteria should reconcile the goals of selecting participants with the condition and ensuring generalizability and ease of recruitment. An accurate measure of muscle mass (eg, D3 creatine dilution) could be a good biomarker in early-phase trials. Performance-based and patient-reported measures of physical function are needed to demonstrate whether treatment improves how a person lives, functions, or feels. Multicomponent functional training that integrates training in balance, stability, strength, and functional tasks with cognitive and behavioral strategies may be needed to translate drug-induced muscle mass gains into functional improvements. Conclusions Collaborations among academic investigators, NIH, FDA, pharmaceutical industry, patients, and professional societies are needed to conduct well-designed trials of function-promoting pharmacological agents with and without multicomponent functional training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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20. Longitudinal association between handgrip strength, gait speed and risk of serious falls in a community-dwelling older population.
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Pham, Thao, McNeil, John J., Barker, Anna L., Orchard, Suzanne G., Newman, Anne B., Robb, Catherine, Ernst, Michael E., Espinoza, Sara, Woods, Robyn L., Nelson, Mark R., Beilin, Lawrence, and Hussain, Sultana Monira
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WALKING speed ,GRIP strength ,BODY mass index ,CHRONIC kidney failure ,OLDER people ,FRAIL elderly ,OVERWEIGHT children - Abstract
Objective: Both grip strength and gait speed can be used as markers of muscle function, however, no previous study has examined them in the same population with respect to risk of falls. Methods: In this prospective cohort study, utilising data from the ASPirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly (ASPREE) trial and ASPREE-Fracture substudy, we analysed the association of grip strength and gait speed and serious falls in healthy older adults. Grip strength was measured using a handheld dynamometer and gait speed from 3-metre timed walks. Serious falls were confined to those involving hospital presentation. Cox regression was used to calculate hazard ratios (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for associations with falls. Results: Over an average of 4.0±1.3 years, amongst 16,445 participants, 1,533 had at least one serious fall. After adjustment for age, sex, physical activity, body mass index, Short Form 12 (state of health), chronic kidney disease, polypharmacy and aspirin, each standard deviation (SD) lower grip strength was associated with 27% (HR 1.27, 95% CI 1.17–1.38) higher risk of falls. The results remained the same for males and females. There was a dose-response relationship in the association between grip strength and falls risk. The higher risk of falls was observed in males in all body mass index (BMI) categories, but only in obese females. The association between gait speed and falls risk was weaker than the association between grip strength and falls risk. Conclusions: All males and only obese females with low grip strength appear to be at the greatest risk of serious falls. These findings may assist in early identification of falls. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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21. The Association between Frailty and Dementia-Free and Physical Disability-Free Survival in Community-Dwelling Older Adults.
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Ekram, A.R.M. Saifuddin, Ryan, Joanne, Espinoza, Sara E., Newman, Anne B., Murray, Anne M., Orchard, Suzanne G., Fitzgerald, Sharyn M., McNeil, John J., Ernst, Michael E., and Woods, Robyn L.
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FRAIL elderly ,FRAILTY ,DISABILITIES ,ADULTS ,OLDER people ,WAIST circumference - Abstract
Introduction: Frailty is a common geriatric syndrome that adversely impacts health outcomes. This study examined correlates of physical frailty in healthy community-dwelling older adults and studied the effect of frailty on disability-free survival (DFS), defined as survival free of independence-limiting physical disability or dementia. Methods: This is a post hoc analysis of 19,114 community-dwelling older adults (median age: 74.0 years, interquartile range or IQR: 6.1 years) from Australia and the USA enrolled in the "ASPirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly (ASPREE)" clinical trial. Frailty was assessed using a modified Fried phenotype and a deficit accumulation frailty index (FI) utilizing a ratio score derived from 66 items. Multinomial logistic regression was used to examine the correlates of frailty and Cox regression to analyze the association between frailty and DFS (and its components). Results: At study enrollment, 39.0% were prefrail, and 2.2% of participants were frail, according to Fried phenotype. Older age, higher waist circumference, lower education, ethnoracial origin, current smoking, depression, and polypharmacy were associated with prefrailty and frailty according to Fried phenotype and FI. Fried phenotype defined prefrailty and frailty predicted reduced DFS (prefrail: HR: 1.67; 95% CI: 1.50–1.86 and frail: HR: 2.80; 95% CI: 2.27–3.46), affecting each component of DFS including dementia, physical disability, and mortality. Effect sizes were larger, according to FI. Conclusion: Our study showed that prefrailty is common in community-dwelling older adults initially free of cardiovascular disease, dementia, or independence-limiting physical disability. Prefrailty and frailty significantly reduced disability-free survival. Addressing modifiable correlates, like depression and polypharmacy, might reduce the adverse impact of frailty on dementia-free and physical disability-free survival. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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22. Associations of body size with all-cause and cause-specific mortality in healthy older adults.
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Carr, Prudence R., Webb, Katherine L., Neumann, Johannes T., Thao, Le T. P., Beilin, Lawrence J., Ernst, Michael E., Fitzgibbon, Bernadette, Gasevic, Danijela, Nelson, Mark R., Newman, Anne B., Orchard, Suzanne G., Owen, Alice, Reid, Christopher M., Stocks, Nigel P., Tonkin, Andrew M., Woods, Robyn L., and McNeil, John J.
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BODY size ,MORTALITY ,CARDIOVASCULAR diseases risk factors ,OLDER people ,WAIST circumference ,OLDER men - Abstract
In the general population, body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference are recognized risk factors for several chronic diseases and all-cause mortality. However, whether these associations are the same for older adults is less clear. The association of baseline BMI and waist circumference with all-cause and cause-specific mortality was investigated in 18,209 Australian and US participants (mean age: 75.1 ± 4.5 years) from the ASPirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly (ASPREE) study, followed up for a median of 6.9 years (IQR: 5.7, 8.0). There were substantially different relationships observed in men and women. In men, the lowest risk of all-cause and cardiovascular mortality was observed with a BMI in the range 25.0–29.9 kg/m
2 [HR25-29.9 vs 21–24.9 kg/m 2 : 0.85; 95% CI, 0.73–1.00] while the highest risk was in those who were underweight [HRBMI <21 kg/m2 vs BMI 21–24.9 kg/m2 : 1.82; 95% CI 1.30–2.55], leading to a clear U-shaped relationship. In women, all-cause mortality was highest in those with the lowest BMI leading to a J-shaped relationship (HRBMI <21 kg/m2 vs BMI 21–24.9 kg/m2 : 1.64; 95% CI 1.26–2.14). Waist circumference showed a weaker relationship with all-cause mortality in both men and women. There was little evidence of a relationship between either index of body size and subsequent cancer mortality in men or women, while non-cardiovascular non-cancer mortality was higher in underweight participants. For older men, being overweight was found to be associated with a lower risk of all-cause mortality, while among both men and women, a BMI in the underweight category was associated with a higher risk. Waist circumference alone had little association with all-cause or cause-specific mortality risk. Trial registration ASPREE https://ClinicalTrials.gov number NCT01038583. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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23. The effect of depressive symptoms on disability‐free survival in healthy older adults: A prospective cohort study.
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Roebuck, Greg, Lotfaliany, Mojtaba, Agustini, Bruno, Forbes, Malcolm, Mohebbi, Mohammadreza, McNeil, John, Woods, Robyn L., Reid, Christopher M., Nelson, Mark R., Shah, Raj C., Ryan, Joanne, Newman, Anne B., Owen, Alice, Freak‐Poli, Rosanne, Stocks, Nigel, and Berk, Michael
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OLDER people ,MENTAL depression ,COHORT analysis ,DISABILITIES ,LONGITUDINAL method ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,INTELLECTUAL disabilities - Abstract
Background: Gerontology and ageing research are increasingly focussing on healthy life span (healthspan), the period of life lived free of serious disease and disability. Late‐life depression (LLD) is believed to impact adversely on physical health. However, no studies have examined its effect on healthspan. This study investigated the effect of LLD and subthreshold depression on disability‐free survival, a widely accepted measure of healthspan. Methods: This prospective cohort study used data from the ASPirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly study. Participants were aged ≥70 years (or ≥65 years for African‐American and Hispanic participants) and free of dementia, physical disability and cardiovascular disease. Depressive symptoms were measured using the 10‐item Centre for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale (CES‐D‐10). LLD and subthreshold depression were defined as CES‐D‐10 scores ≥8 and 3–7, respectively. Disability‐free survival was defined as survival free of dementia and persistent physical disability. Results: A total of 19,110 participants were followed up for a maximum of 7.3 years. In female participants, LLD was associated with lower disability‐free survival adjusting for sociodemographic and lifestyle factors, medical comorbidities, polypharmacy, physical function and antidepressant use (HR, 1.50; 95% CI, 1.23–1.82). In male participants, LLD was associated with lower disability‐free survival adjusting for sociodemographic and lifestyle factors (HR, 1.30; 95% CI, 1.03–1.64). Subthreshold depression was also associated with lower disability‐free survival in both sexes. Conclusions: LLD may be a common and important risk factor for shortened healthspan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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24. Longitudinal Associations of Plasma TMAO and Related Metabolites with Cognitive Impairment and Dementia in Older Adults: The Cardiovascular Health Study.
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de Oliveira Otto, Marcia C., Li, Xinmin S., Wang, Zeneng, Siscovick, David S., Newman, Anne B., Lai, Heidi Tsz Mung, Nemet, Ina, Lee, Yujin, Wang, Meng, Fretts, Amanda, Lemaitre, Rozenn N., Tang, W.H. Wilson, Lopez, Oscar, Hazen, Stanley L., Mozaffarian, Dariush, and Siscovick, David
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OLDER people ,MINI-Mental State Examination ,COGNITION disorders ,METABOLITES ,PROPORTIONAL hazards models ,DEMENTIA ,BETAINE ,CARNITINE ,AMINES ,CHOLINE ,RESEARCH funding ,MEDICARE ,ANIMALS - Abstract
Background: Animal studies suggest that gut microbiome metabolites such as trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) may influence cognitive function and dementia risk. However potential health effects of TMAO and related metabolites remain unclear.Objective: We examined prospective associations of TMAO, γ-butyrobetaine, crotonobetaine, carnitine, choline, and betaine with risk of cognitive impairment and dementia among older adults aged 65 years and older in the Cardiovascular Health Study (CHS).Methods: TMAO and metabolites were measured in stored plasma specimens collected at baseline. Incident cognitive impairment was assessed using the 100-point Modified Mini-Mental State Examination administered serially up to 7 times. Clinical dementia was identified using neuropsychological tests adjudicated by CHS Cognition Study investigators, and by ICD-9 codes from linked Medicare data. Associations of each metabolite with cognitive outcomes were assessed using Cox proportional hazards models.Results: Over a median of 13 years of follow-up, 529 cases of cognitive impairment, and 522 of dementia were identified. After multivariable adjustment for relevant risk factors, no associations were seen with TMAO, carnitine, choline, or betaine. In contrast, higher crotonobetaine was associated with 20-32% higher risk of cognitive impairment and dementia per interquintile range (IQR), while γ-butyrobetaine was associated with ∼25% lower risk of the same cognitive outcomes per IQR.∥Conclusion:These findings suggest that γ-butyrobetaine, crotonobetaine, two gut microbe and host metabolites, are associated with risk of cognitive impairment and dementia. Our results indicate a need for mechanistic studies evaluating potential effects of these metabolites, and their interconversion on brain health, especially later in life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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25. Prediction of disability-free survival in healthy older people.
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Neumann, Johannes Tobias, Thao, Le T. P., Murray, Anne M., Callander, Emily, Carr, Prudence R., Nelson, Mark R., Wolfe, Rory, Woods, Robyn L., Reid, Christopher M., Shah, Raj C., Newman, Anne B., Williamson, Jeff D., Tonkin, Andrew M., McNeil, John J., on behalf of the ASPREE investigators, McNeil, John, Murray, Anne, Beilin, Lawrie, Chan, Andrew, and Demons, Jamehl
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OLDER people ,RECEIVER operating characteristic curves ,PROPORTIONAL hazards models ,WALKING speed ,SMOKING ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,MINI-Mental State Examination - Abstract
Prolonging survival in good health is a fundamental societal goal. However, the leading determinants of disability-free survival in healthy older people have not been well established. Data from ASPREE, a bi-national placebo-controlled trial of aspirin with 4.7 years median follow-up, was analysed. At enrolment, participants were healthy and without prior cardiovascular events, dementia or persistent physical disability. Disability-free survival outcome was defined as absence of dementia, persistent disability or death. Selection of potential predictors from amongst 25 biomedical, psychosocial and lifestyle variables including recognized geriatric risk factors, utilizing a machine-learning approach. Separate models were developed for men and women. The selected predictors were evaluated in a multivariable Cox proportional hazards model and validated internally by bootstrapping. We included 19,114 Australian and US participants aged ≥65 years (median 74 years, IQR 71.6–77.7). Common predictors of a worse prognosis in both sexes included higher age, lower Modified Mini-Mental State Examination score, lower gait speed, lower grip strength and abnormal (low or elevated) body mass index. Additional risk factors for men included current smoking, and abnormal eGFR. In women, diabetes and depression were additional predictors. The biased-corrected areas under the receiver operating characteristic curves for the final prognostic models at 5 years were 0.72 for men and 0.75 for women. Final models showed good calibration between the observed and predicted risks. We developed a prediction model in which age, cognitive function and gait speed were the strongest predictors of disability-free survival in healthy older people. Trial registration Clinicaltrials.gov (NCT01038583) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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26. Perceived Physical Fatigability Predicts All-Cause Mortality in Older Adults.
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Glynn, Nancy W, Gmelin, Theresa, Renner, Sharon W, Qiao, Yujia (Susanna), Boudreau, Robert M, Feitosa, Mary F, Wojczynski, Mary K, Cosentino, Stephanie, Andersen, Stacy L, Christensen, Kaare, and Newman, Anne B
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OLDER people ,MORTALITY ,PROPORTIONAL hazards models ,LONGEVITY ,PHYSICAL diagnosis ,AGING ,RESEARCH funding ,FATIGUE (Physiology) - Abstract
Background: Perceived physical fatigability is highly prevalent in older adults and associated with mobility decline and other health consequences. We examined the prognostic value of perceived physical fatigability as an independent predictor of risk of death among older adults.Methods: Participants (N = 2 906), mean age 73.5 [SD, 10.4] years, 54.2% women, 99.7% white enrolled in the Long Life Family Study, were assessed at Visit 2 (2014-2017) with 2.7 [SD, 1.0] years follow-up. The Pittsburgh Fatigability Scale (PFS), a 10-item, self-administered validated questionnaire (score range 0-50, higher = greater fatigability) measured perceived physical fatigability at Visit 2. Deaths post-Visit 2 through December 31, 2019 were identified by family members notifying field centers, reporting during another family member's annual phone follow-up, an obituary, or Civil Registration System (Denmark). We censored all other participants at their last contact. Cox proportional hazard models predicted mortality by fatigability severity, adjusted for family relatedness and other covariates.Results: Age-adjusted PFS Physical scores were higher for those who died (19.1 [SE, 0.8]) compared with alive (12.2, [SE, 0.4]) overall, as well as across age strata (p < .001), except for those 60-69 years (p = .79). Participants with the most severe fatigability (PFS Physical scores ≥ 25) were over twice as likely to die (hazard ratio, 2.33 [95% CI, 1.65-3.28]) compared with those who had less severe fatigability (PFS Physical scores < 25) after adjustment.Conclusions: Our work underscores the utility of the PFS as a novel patient-reported prognostic indicator of phenotypic aging that captures both overt and underlying disease burden that predicts death. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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27. Validation of a Deficit-Accumulation Frailty Index in the ASPirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly Study and Its Predictive Capacity for Disability-Free Survival.
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Ryan, Joanne, Espinoza, Sara, Ernst, Michael E, Ekram, A R M Saifuddin, Wolfe, Rory, Murray, Anne M, Shah, Raj C, Orchard, Suzanne G, Fitzgerald, Sharyn, Beilin, Lawrence J, Ward, Stephanie A, Williamson, Jeff D, Newman, Anne B, McNeil, John J, and Woods, Robyn L
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FRAILTY ,OLDER people ,ASPIRIN ,WALKING speed ,GRIP strength ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology ,GERIATRIC assessment ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DEMENTIA ,SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) ,RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Frailty is a state of heightened vulnerability and susceptibility to physiologic stressors that increases with age. It has shown increasing utility in predicting a range of adverse health outcomes. Here, we characterize a 67-item deficit-accumulation frailty index (FI) in 19 110 community-dwelling individuals in the ASPirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly clinical trial. Participants aged 65-98 years were recruited from the United States and Australia and were without diagnosed dementia and cardiovascular disease, and major physical disability. The median FI score was .10 (interquartile range: .07-.14) at baseline, and the prevalence of frailty (FI > .21) increased from 8.1% to 17.4% after 6 years. FI was positively associated with age, and women had significantly higher scores than men at all ages. The FI was negatively correlated with gait speed (r = -.31) and grip strength (r = -.46), and strongly associated with a modified Fried's frailty phenotype (p < .0001, for all comparisons). Frailty was associated with the primary composite outcome capturing independent life lived free of major disability and dementia, and increased the rate of persistent physical disability (hazard ratio: 21.3, 95% confidence interval: 15.6-28.9). It added significantly to the predictive capacity of these outcomes above age, sex, and ethnicity alone. The FI is thus a useful biomarker of aging even among relatively healthy older individuals and provides important information about an individual's vulnerability to and risk of disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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28. Persistent polypharmacy and fall injury risk: the Health, Aging and Body Composition Study.
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Xue, Lingshu, Boudreau, Robert M., Donohue, Julie M., Zgibor, Janice C., Marcum, Zachary A., Costacou, Tina, Newman, Anne B., Waters, Teresa M., and Strotmeyer, Elsa S.
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BODY composition ,POLYPHARMACY ,OLDER people ,MEDICAL personnel ,MEDICATION therapy management - Abstract
Background: Older adults receive treatment for fall injuries in both inpatient and outpatient settings. The effect of persistent polypharmacy (i.e. using multiple medications over a long period) on fall injuries is understudied, particularly for outpatient injuries. We examined the association between persistent polypharmacy and treated fall injury risk from inpatient and outpatient settings in community-dwelling older adults.Methods: The Health, Aging and Body Composition Study included 1764 community-dwelling adults (age 73.6 ± 2.9 years; 52% women; 38% black) with Medicare Fee-For-Service (FFS) claims at or within 6 months after 1998/99 clinic visit. Incident fall injuries (N = 545 in 4.6 ± 2.9 years) were defined as the initial claim with an ICD-9 fall E-code and non-fracture injury, or fracture code with/without a fall code from 1998/99 clinic visit to 12/31/08. Those without fall injury (N = 1219) were followed for 8.1 ± 2.6 years. Stepwise Cox models of fall injury risk with a time-varying variable for persistent polypharmacy (defined as ≥6 prescription medications at the two most recent consecutive clinic visits) were adjusted for demographics, lifestyle characteristics, chronic conditions, and functional ability. Sensitivity analyses explored if persistent polypharmacy both with and without fall risk increasing drugs (FRID) use were similarly associated with fall injury risk.Results: Among 1764 participants, 636 (36%) had persistent polypharmacy over the follow-up period, and 1128 (64%) did not. Fall injury incidence was 38 per 1000 person-years. Persistent polypharmacy increased fall injury risk (hazard ratio [HR]: 1.31 [1.06, 1.63]) after adjusting for covariates. Persistent polypharmacy with FRID use was associated with a 48% increase in fall injury risk (95%CI: 1.10, 2.00) vs. those who had non-persistent polypharmacy without FRID use. Risks for persistent polypharmacy without FRID use (HR: 1.22 [0.93, 1.60]) and non-persistent polypharmacy with FRID use (HR: 1.08 [0.77, 1.51]) did not significantly increase compared to non-persistent polypharmacy without FRID use.Conclusions: Persistent polypharmacy, particularly combined with FRID use, was associated with increased risk for treated fall injuries from inpatient and outpatient settings. Clinicians may need to consider medication management for FRID and other fall prevention strategies in community-dwelling older adults with persistent polypharmacy to reduce fall injury risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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29. Elevated IL-6 and CRP Levels Are Associated With Incident Self-Reported Major Mobility Disability: A Pooled Analysis of Older Adults With Slow Gait Speed.
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Beavers, Daniel P, Kritchevsky, Stephen B, Gill, Thomas M, Ambrosius, Walter T, Anton, Stephen D, Fielding, Roger A, King, Abby C, Rejeski, W Jack, Lovato, Laura, McDermott, Mary M, Newman, Anne B, Pahor, Marco, Walkup, Michael P, Tracy, Russell P, and Manini, Todd M
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WALKING speed ,C-reactive protein ,OLDER people ,INTERLEUKIN-6 ,PROPORTIONAL hazards models ,INTERLEUKINS ,SELF-evaluation ,SYMPTOMS ,WALKING ,RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Background: Elevated interleukine-6 (IL-6) and C-reactive protein (CRP) are associated with aging-related reductions in physical function, but little is known about their independent and combined relationships with major mobility disability (MMD), defined as the self-reported inability to walk a quarter mile.Methods: We estimated the absolute and relative effect of elevated baseline IL-6, CRP, and their combination on self-reported MMD risk among older adults (≥68 years; 59% female) with slow gait speed (<1.0 m/s). Participants were MMD-free at baseline. IL-6 and CRP were assessed using a central laboratory. The study combined a cohort of community-dwelling high-functioning older adults (Health ABC) with 2 trials of low-functioning adults at risk of MMD (LIFE-P, LIFE). Analyses utilized Poisson regression for absolute MMD incidence and proportional hazards models for relative risk.Results: We found higher MMD risk per unit increase in log IL-6 (hazard ratio [HR] = 1.26; 95% confidence interval [95% CI] 1.13-1.41). IL-6 meeting predetermined threshold considered to be high (>2.5 pg/mL) was similarly associated with higher risk of MMD (HR = 1.31; 95% CI 1.12-1.54). Elevated CRP (CRP >3.0 mg/L) was also associated with increased MMD risk (HR = 1.38; 95% CI 1.10-1.74). The CRP effect was more pronounced among participants with elevated IL-6 (HR = 1.62; 95% CI 1.12-2.33) compared to lower IL-6 levels (HR = 1.19; 95% CI 0.85-1.66).Conclusions: High baseline IL-6 and CRP were associated with an increased risk of MMD among older adults with slow gait speed. A combined biomarker model suggests CRP was associated with MMD when IL-6 was elevated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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30. Effect of Aspirin on Activities of Daily Living Disability in Community-Dwelling Older Adults.
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Woods, Robyn L, Espinoza, Sara, Thao, Le T P, Ernst, Michael E, Ryan, Joanne, Wolfe, Rory, Shah, Raj C, Ward, Stephanie A, Storey, Elsdon, Nelson, Mark R, Reid, Christopher M, Lockery, Jessica E, Orchard, Suzanne G, Trevaks, Ruth E, Fitzgerald, Sharyn M, Stocks, Nigel P, Williamson, Jeff D, McNeil, John J, Murray, Anne M, and Newman, Anne B
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ADULTS ,ASPIRIN ,ACTIVITIES of daily living ,OLDER people ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,PROPORTIONAL hazards models ,DISABILITIES ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology ,DISABILITY evaluation ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,INDEPENDENT living ,AGING ,RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Background: Cerebrovascular events, dementia, and cancer can contribute to physical disability with activities of daily living (ADL). It is unclear whether low-dose aspirin reduces this burden in aging populations. In a secondary analysis, we now examine aspirin's effects on incident and persistent ADL disability within a primary prevention aspirin trial in community-dwelling older adults.Methods: The ASPREE (ASPirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly) trial of daily 100 mg aspirin versus placebo recruited 19 114 healthy adults aged 70+ years (65+ years if U.S. minority) in Australia and the United States. Six basic ADLs were assessed every 6 months. Incident ADL disability was defined as inability or severe difficulty with ≥1 ADL; persistence was confirmed if the same ADL disability remained after 6 months. Proportional hazards modeling compared time to incident or persistent ADL disability for aspirin versus placebo; death without prior disability was a competing risk.Results: Over a median of 4.7 years, incident ADL disability was similar in those receiving aspirin (776/9525) and placebo (787/9589) with walking, bathing, dressing, and transferring the most commonly reported. Only 24% of incident ADL disability progressed to persistent. Persistent ADL disability was lower in the aspirin group (4.3 vs 5.3 events/1000 py; hazard ratio [HR] = 0.81, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.66-1.00), with bathing and dressing the most common ADL disabilities in both groups. Following persistent ADL disability, there were more deaths in the aspirin group (24 vs 12).Discussion: Low-dose aspirin in initially healthy older people did not reduce the risk of incident ADL disability, although there was evidence of reduced persistent ADL disability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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31. Machine Learning in Aging: An Example of Developing Prediction Models for Serious Fall Injury in Older Adults.
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Speiser, Jaime Lynn, Callahan, Kathryn E, Houston, Denise K, Fanning, Jason, Gill, Thomas M, Guralnik, Jack M, Newman, Anne B, Pahor, Marco, Rejeski, W Jack, and Miller, Michael E
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MACHINE learning ,OLDER people ,PREDICTION models ,DECISION trees ,RANDOM forest algorithms ,PSYCHOLOGICAL aspects of aging ,RESEARCH evaluation ,PROGNOSIS ,ACCIDENTAL falls ,DECISION making ,AGING ,TRAUMA severity indices ,RESEARCH funding ,ALGORITHMS - Abstract
Background: Advances in computational algorithms and the availability of large datasets with clinically relevant characteristics provide an opportunity to develop machine learning prediction models to aid in diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment of older adults. Some studies have employed machine learning methods for prediction modeling, but skepticism of these methods remains due to lack of reproducibility and difficulty in understanding the complex algorithms that underlie models. We aim to provide an overview of two common machine learning methods: decision tree and random forest. We focus on these methods because they provide a high degree of interpretability.Method: We discuss the underlying algorithms of decision tree and random forest methods and present a tutorial for developing prediction models for serious fall injury using data from the Lifestyle Interventions and Independence for Elders (LIFE) study.Results: Decision tree is a machine learning method that produces a model resembling a flow chart. Random forest consists of a collection of many decision trees whose results are aggregated. In the tutorial example, we discuss evaluation metrics and interpretation for these models. Illustrated using data from the LIFE study, prediction models for serious fall injury were moderate at best (area under the receiver operating curve of 0.54 for decision tree and 0.66 for random forest).Conclusions: Machine learning methods offer an alternative to traditional approaches for modeling outcomes in aging, but their use should be justified and output should be carefully described. Models should be assessed by clinical experts to ensure compatibility with clinical practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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32. A Metabolite Composite Score Attenuated a Substantial Portion of the Higher Mortality Risk Associated With Frailty Among Community-Dwelling Older Adults.
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Marron, Megan M, Harris, Tamara B, Boudreau, Robert M, Clish, Clary B, Moore, Steven C, Murphy, Rachel A, Murthy, Venkatesh L, Sanders, Jason L, Shah, Ravi V, Tseng, George C, Wendell, Stacy G, Zmuda, Joseph M, and Newman, Anne B
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LIQUID chromatography-mass spectrometry ,ADULTS ,OLDER people ,OLDER men ,MORTALITY - Abstract
Background: Frailty is more prevalent among black versus white older Americans. We previously identified 37 metabolites associated with the vigor to frailty spectrum using the Scale of Aging Vigor in Epidemiology (SAVE) among older black men from the Health, Aging, and Body Composition (Health ABC) study. Here, we sought to develop a metabolite composite score based on the 37 SAVE-associated metabolites and determine whether the composite score predicts mortality and whether it attenuates the association between frailty and mortality among older black men.Methods: Plasma metabolites were measured using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Most of the 37 metabolites were organic acids/derivatives or lipids. Metabolites were ranked into tertiles: tertiles associated with more vigorous SAVE scores were scored 0, mid-tertiles were scored 1, and tertiles associated with frailer SAVE scores were scored 2. Composite scores were the sum of metabolite tertile scores. We examined mortality associations using Cox regression. Percent attenuation estimated the extent to which metabolites attenuated the association between frailty and mortality.Results: One standard deviation frailer SAVE was associated with 30% higher mortality, adjusting for age and site (p = .0002); this association was attenuated by 56% after additionally adjusting for the metabolite composite score. In this model, one standard deviation higher metabolite composite score was associated with 46% higher mortality (p < .0001). Metabolite composite scores also predicted mortality (p = .045) in a validation sample of 120 older adults (40% men, 90% white).Conclusion: These metabolites may provide a deeper characterization of the higher mortality that is associated with frailty among older adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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33. The Relationship Between Intermuscular Fat and Physical Performance Is Moderated by Muscle Area in Older Adults.
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Farsijani, Samaneh, Santanasto, Adam J, Miljkovic, Iva, Boudreau, Robert M, Goodpaster, Bret H, Kritchevsky, Stephen B, and Newman, Anne B
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PHYSICAL mobility ,OLDER people ,COMPUTED tomography ,FAT ,LEG muscles ,MUSCLES ,THIGH ,SKELETAL muscle physiology ,SKELETAL muscle ,ANTHROPOMETRY ,CROSS-sectional method ,AGE distribution ,RESEARCH funding ,ADIPOSE tissues - Abstract
Background: Age-related deposition of fat in skeletal muscle is associated with functional limitations. Skeletal muscle fat may be present in people with preserved muscle mass or accompanied by muscle wasting. However, it is not clear if the association between muscle fat deposition and physical performance is moderated by muscle mass.Objective: To determine whether the association between midthigh intermuscular fat and physical performance is moderated by muscle area.Methods: We performed a cross-sectional analysis of the Health, Aging, and, Body Composition (ABC) study data collected in 2002-2003 (n = 1897, women: 52.2%). Midthigh muscle cross-sectional area (by computed tomography) and physical performance measures were compared across quartiles of intermuscular fat absolute area. Moderation analysis was performed to determine the conditional effect of intermuscular fat on physical performance as a function of muscle area. Conditional effects were evaluated at three levels of muscle area (mean and ± 1 standard deviation [SD]; 213.2 ± 53.2 cm2).Results: Simple slope analysis showed that the negative association between intermuscular fat area (cm2) and leg strength (N·m) was of greater magnitude (beta coefficient [b], 95% confidence interval [CI] = -0.288 [-0.427, -0.148]) in participants with greater muscle area (ie, 1 SD above the mean) compared to those with lower muscle area (ie, at mean [b = -0.12 {-0.248, 0.008}] or 1 SD below the mean [b = 0.048 {-0.122, 0.217}]). Similarly, the negative association of intermuscular fat with 400-m walk speed (m/s) and chair stand (seconds) was greater in those with higher muscle areas (p < .001) compared to those with lower muscle areas.Conclusions: The association between higher intermuscular fat area and impaired physical function in aging is moderated by muscle area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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34. Chronic kidney disease as a risk factor for peripheral nerve impairment in older adults: A longitudinal analysis of Health, Aging and Body Composition (Health ABC) study.
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Doshi, Simit, Moorthi, Ranjani N., Fried, Linda F., Sarnak, Mark J., Satterfield, Suzanne, Shlipak, Michael, Lange-Maia, Brittney S., Newman, Anne B., and Strotmeyer, Elsa S.
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DISEASE risk factors ,PERIPHERAL nervous system ,CHRONIC kidney failure ,OLDER people ,BODY composition ,AGE factors in well-being ,ADULTS - Abstract
Introduction: Sensory and motor nerve deficits are prevalent in older adults and are associated with loss of functional independence. We hypothesize that chronic kidney disease predisposes to worsening sensorimotor nerve function over time. Materials and methods: Participants were from the Health, Aging and Body Composition Study (N = 1121) with longitudinal data between 2000–01 (initial visit) and 2007–08 (follow-up visit). Only participants with non-impaired nerve function at the initial visit were included. The predictor was presence of CKD (estimated GFR ≤ 60 ml/min/1.73m
2 ) from the 1999–2000 visit. Peripheral nerve function outcomes at 7-year follow-up were 1) Motor: "new" impairments in motor parameters (nerve conduction velocity NCV < 40 m/s or peroneal compound motor action potential < 1 mv) at follow-up, and 2) Sensory: "new" impairment defined as insensitivity to standard 10-g monofilament or light 1.4-g monofilament at the great toe and "worsening" as a change from light to standard touch insensitivity over time. The association between CKD and "new" or "worsening" peripheral nerve impairment was studied using logistic regression. Results: The study population was 45.9% male, 34.3% Black and median age 75 y. CKD participants (15.6%) were older, more hypertensive, higher in BMI and had 2.37 (95% CI 1.30–4.34) fold higher adjusted odds of developing new motor nerve impairments in NCV. CKD was associated with a 2.02 (95% CI 1.01–4.03) fold higher odds of worsening monofilament insensitivity. CKD was not associated with development of new monofilament insensitivity. Conclusions: Pre-existing CKD leads to new and worsening sensorimotor nerve impairments over a 7-year time period in community-dwelling older adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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35. Quantifying and Classifying Physical Resilience Among Older Adults: The Health, Aging, and Body Composition Study.
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Wu, Chenkai, Li, Ya-Xi, Marron, Megan M, Odden, Michelle C, Newman, Anne B, and Sanders, Jason L
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OLDER people ,BODY composition ,LONGEVITY ,PREDICTIVE validity ,LIFE spans ,RESEARCH ,AGE distribution ,RESEARCH methodology ,GERIATRIC assessment ,HEALTH status indicators ,EVALUATION research ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PHYSIOLOGICAL adaptation ,SEX distribution ,COMPARATIVE studies ,ECONOMIC aspects of diseases - Abstract
Background: The concept of resilience has gained increasing attention in aging research; however, current literature lacks consensus on how to measure resilience. We constructed a novel resilience measure based on the degree of mismatch between persons' frailty level and disease burden and examined its predictive validity. We also sought to explore the physiological correlates of resilience.Methods: Participants were 2,457 older adults from the Health, Aging, and Body Composition Study. We constructed the resilience measure as the residual taken from the linear model regressing frailty on age, sex, race/ethnicity, 14 diseases, self-reported health, and number of medications. Participants were classified into three groups-adapters, expected agers, and premature frailers-based on residuals (less than, within, or above one standard deviation of the mean). Validation outcomes included years of able life (YAL), years of healthy life (YHL), years of healthy and able life (YHAL), disability, hospitalization, and survival.Results: The average YHAL was 5.1, 7.7, and 9.1 years among premature frailers, expected agers, and adapters, respectively. Compared with premature frailers and expected agers, adapters had significantly lower rates of disability, hospitalization, and mortality and higher proportion surviving to 90 years. The likelihood of surviving to 90 years was 20.4%, 30.6%, and 39.7% among premature frailers, expected agers, and adapters.Conclusions: We developed and validated a novel approach for quantifying and classifying physical resilience in a cohort of well-functioning white and black older adults. Persons with high physical resilience level had longer healthy life span and lower rates of adverse outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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36. Long-term rates of change in musculoskeletal aging and body composition: findings from the Health, Aging and Body Composition Study.
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Westbury, Leo D., Syddall, Holly E., Fuggle, Nicholas R., Dennison, Elaine M., Cauley, Jane A., Shiroma, Eric J., Fielding, Roger A., Newman, Anne B., and Cooper, Cyrus
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BODY composition ,WALKING speed ,LEAN body mass ,GRIP strength ,OLDER people ,BONE density ,SKELETAL muscle physiology ,RESEARCH ,PHOTON absorptiometry ,RESEARCH methodology ,SARCOPENIA ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HEALTH of older people ,MUSCLE strength - Abstract
Musculoskeletal disorders are common among older people. Preventive strategies require understanding of age-related changes in strength, function and body composition, including how they interrelate. We have described, and examined associations between, 9-year changes in these parameters among 2917 Health, Aging and Body Composition Study participants (aged 70-79 years). Appendicular lean mass (ALM), whole body fat mass and total hip BMD were ascertained using DXA; muscle strength by grip dynamometry; and muscle function by gait speed. For each characteristic annualised percentage changes were calculated; measures of conditional change (independent of baseline) were derived and their interrelationships were examined using Pearson correlations; proportion of variance at 9-year follow-up explained by baseline level was estimated; and mean trajectories in relation to age were estimated using linear mixed models. Analyses were stratified by sex. Median [lower quartile, upper quartile] annual percentage declines were grip strength (1.5 [0.0, 2.9]), gait speed (2.0 [0.6, 3.7]), ALM (0.7 [0.1, 1.4]), fat mass (0.4 [- 1.1, 1.9]) and hip BMD (0.5 [0.0, 1.1]). Declines were linear for ALM and accelerated over time for other characteristics. Most conditional change measures were positively correlated, most strongly between ALM, fat mass and hip BMD (r > 0.28). Proportion of variation at follow-up explained by baseline was lower for grip strength and gait speed (39-52%) than other characteristics (69-86%). Strength and function declined more rapidly, and were less correlated between baseline and follow-up, than measures of body composition. Therefore, broader intervention strategies to prevent loss of strength and function in later life are required as those targeting body composition alone may be insufficient. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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37. Factors Associated With Treatment and Control of Hypertension in a Healthy Elderly Population Free of Cardiovascular Disease: A Cross-sectional Study.
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Chowdhury, Enayet K, Nelson, Mark R, Ernst, Michael E, Margolis, Karen L, Beilin, Lawrence J, Johnston, Colin I, Woods, Robyn L, Murray, Anne M, Wolfe, Rory, Storey, Elsdon, Shah, Raj C, Lockery, Jessica E, Tonkin, Andrew M, Newman, Anne B, Williamson, Jeff D, Abhayaratna, Walter P, Stocks, Nigel P, Fitzgerald, Sharyn M, Orchard, Suzanne G, and Trevaks, Ruth E
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CARDIOVASCULAR diseases ,CLINICAL trial registries ,OLDER people ,BLOOD pressure ,HYPERTENSION - Abstract
BACKGROUND Despite readily available treatments, control of blood pressure (BP) with population aging remains suboptimal. Further, there are gaps in the understanding of the management of high BP in the aged. We explored antihypertensive treatment and control among elderly hypertensive participants free from overt cardiovascular disease (CVD), and identified factors related to both "untreated" and "treated but uncontrolled" high BP. METHODS We analyzed baseline data from 19,114 individuals aged ≥65 years enrolled from Australia and United States (US) in the ASPirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly study. Hypertension was defined as an average systolic/diastolic BP ≥140/90 mm Hg and/or the use of any BP lowering medication. "Controlled hypertension" was defined if participants were receiving antihypertensive medication and BP <140 and 90 mm Hg. Descriptive analyses were used to summarize hypertension control rates; logistic regression was used to investigate relationships with treatment and BP control. RESULTS Overall, 74% (14,213/19,114) of participants were hypertensive; and of these 29% (4,151/14,213) were untreated. Among those treated participants, 53% (5,330/10,062) had BP ≥140/90 mm Hg. Participants who were untreated were more likely to be men, have higher educational status, and be in good physical health, and less likely to have significant comorbidities. The factors related to "treated but uncontrolled" BP included older age, male, Black race (vs. White), using antihypertensive monotherapy (vs. multiple) and residing in Australia (vs. US). CONCLUSIONS High levels of "untreated" and "treated but uncontrolled" BP occur in healthy elderly people without CVD, suggesting there are opportunities for better BP control in the primary prevention of CVD in this population. CLINICAL TRIALS REGISTRATION NCT01038583. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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38. Discrepancy in Frailty Identification: Move Beyond Predictive Validity.
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Xue, Qian-Li, Tian, Jing, Walston, Jeremy D, Chaves, Paulo H M, Newman, Anne B, and Bandeen-Roche, Karen
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OLDER people ,PREDICTIVE validity ,OLD age ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Background: To evaluate the discordance in frailty classification between the frailty index (FI) and the physical frailty phenotype (PFP) and identify factors discriminating those with discordant frailty classification from each other and from those for whom the assessments agree.Methods: A prospective observational study of older adults aged 65 and older selected from Medicare eligibility lists in four U.S. communities (n = 5,362). The PFP was measured by the Cardiovascular Health Study PFP. Participants meeting three or more of the five criteria were deemed frail. The FI was calculated as the proportion of deficits in an a priori selected set of 48 measures, and participants were classified as frail if FI is greater than 0.35.Results: The prevalence of frailty was 7.0% by the PFP and 8.3% by the FI. Of the 730 deemed frail by either instrument, only 12% were in agreement, whereas 39% were classified as frail by the PFP, but not the FI, and 48% were classified as frail by the FI, but not the PFP. Participants aged 65-72 years or with greater disease burden were most likely to be characterized as being FI-frail, but not PFP-frail. The associations of frailty with age and mortality were stronger when frailty was measured by the PFP rather than the FI.Conclusions: Despite comparable frailty prevalence between the PFP and the FI, there was substantial discordance in individual-level classification, with highest agreement existing only in the most vulnerable subset. These findings suggest that there are clinically important contexts in which the PFP and the FI cannot be used interchangeably. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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39. A Case for Promoting Movement Medicine: Preventing Disability in the LIFE Randomized Controlled Trial.
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Fanning, Jason, Rejeski, W Jack, Chen, Shyh-Huei, Nicklas, Barbara J, Walkup, Michael P, Axtell, Robert S, Fielding, Roger A, Glynn, Nancy W, King, Abby C, Manini, Todd M, McDermott, Mary M, Newman, Anne B, Pahor, Marco, Tudor-Locke, Catrine, Miller, Michael E, Investigators, LIFE Study, and LIFE Study Investigators
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PHYSICAL activity ,PRINCIPAL components analysis ,OLDER people ,POSTURE ,PEDOMETERS ,HEALTH education ,PHYSICAL activity measurement - Abstract
Background: The movement profile of older adults with compromised function is unknown, as is the relationship between these profiles and the development of major mobility disability (MMD)-a critical clinical outcome. We first describe the dimensions of movement in older adults with compromised function and then examine whether these dimensions predict the onset of MMD.Methods: Older adults at risk for MMD (N = 1,022, mean age = 78.7 years) were randomized to receive a structured physical activity intervention or health education control. We assessed MMD in 6-month intervals (average follow-up of 2.2 years until incident MMD), with activity assessed at baseline, 6-, 12- and 24-month follow-up via accelerometry.Results: A principal components analysis of 11 accelerometer-derived metrics yielded three components representing lifestyle movement (LM), extended bouts of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA), and stationary body posture. LM accounted for the greatest proportion of variance in movement (53%). Within health education, both baseline LM (HR = 0.74; 95% CI 0.62 to 0.88) and moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (HR = 0.69; 95% CI 0.54 to 0.87) were associated with MMD, whereas only LM was associated with MMD within physical activity (HR = 0.74; 95% CI 0.61 to 0.89). There were similar nonlinear relationships present for LM in both physical activity and health education (p < .04), whereby risk for MMD was lower among individuals with higher levels of LM.Conclusions: Both LM and moderate-to-vigorous physical activity should be central in treatment regimens for older adults at risk for MMD.Trial Registration: clinicaltrials.gov Identifier NCT01072500. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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40. Physical Activity and Years of Healthy Life in Older Adults: Results From the Cardiovascular Health Study.
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Hirsch, Calvin H., Diehr, Paula, Newman, Anne B., Gerrior, Shirley A., Pratt, Charlotte, Lebowitz, Michael D., and Jackson, Sharon A.
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OLDER people ,PHYSICAL fitness for older people ,EXERCISE for older people ,AGE factors in health behavior ,ACTIVITIES of daily living ,LIFE skills ,HEALTH of older people - Abstract
Little is known about how many years of life and disability-free years seniors can gain through exercise. Using data from the Cardiovascular Health Study, the authors estimated the extra years of life and self-reported healthy life (over 11 years) and years without impairment in activities of daily living (over 6 years) associated with quintiles of physical activity (PA) in older adults from different age groups. They estimated PA from the Minnesota Leisure Time Activities Questionnaire. Multivariable linear regression adjusted for health-related covariates. The relative gains in survival and years of healthy life (YHL) generally were proportionate to the amount of PA, greater among those 75+, and higher in men. Compared with being sedentary, the most active men 75+ had 1.49 more YHL (95% CI: 0.79, 2.19), and the most active women 75+ had 1.06 more YHL (95% CI: 0.44, 1.68). Seniors over age 74 experience the largest relative gains in survival and healthy life from physical activity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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41. Physical Activity and Pet Ownership in Year 3 of the Health ABC Study.
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Thorpe, Jr., Roland J., Kreisle, Regina A., Glickman, Lawrence T., Simonsick, Eleanor M., Newman, Anne B., and Kritchevsky, Stephen
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PET owners ,PHYSICAL fitness ,OLDER people ,HEALTH surveys ,WALKING ,EXERCISE ,FAMILIES ,INCOME - Abstract
Pet ownership among older adults was investigated to determine whether dog owners were more likely to engage in physical activity than non-dog-pet or non-pet owners. The relationship between pet ownership and physical activity was examined using data from the Health ABC study. After age, race, education level, number of assets, family income, and site were adjusted for dog owners were more likely than non-pet owners to have engaged in non-exercise-related walking in the preceding week but did not differ from non-pet owners in walking for exercise or any physical activity. In contrast, non-dog-pet owners did not differ from non-pet owners in non-exercise-related walking in the preceding week and were less likely than non-pet owners to have engaged in walking for exercise or any physical activity in the preceding week. The activity-related benefits of pet ownership in older adults were limited to dog owners, who engaged in greater overall physical activity-non-exercise-related walking, in particular. Whether pet-related physical activity is sufficient to provide health benefits requires longitudinal investigation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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42. Effect of Losartan and Fish Oil on Plasma IL-6 and Mobility in Older Persons. The ENRGISE Pilot Randomized Clinical Trial.
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Pahor, Marco, Anton, Stephen D, Beavers, Daniel P, Cauley, Jane A, Fielding, Roger A, Kritchevsky, Stephen B, Leeuwenburgh, Christiaan, Lewis, Kristina H, Liu, Christine K, Lovato, Laura C, Lu, Jane, Manini, Todd M, McDermott, Mary M, Miller, Michael E, Newman, Anne B, Radziszewska, Barbara, Stowe, Cynthia L, Tracy, Russell P, Walkup, Michael P, and Wu, Samuel S
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FISH oils ,OLDER people ,WALKING speed ,OMEGA-3 fatty acids ,UNSATURATED fatty acids - Abstract
Background: Low-grade chronic inflammation, characterized by elevations in plasma Interleukin-6 (IL-6), is an independent risk factor of impaired mobility in older persons. Angiotensin receptor blockers and omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (ω-3) may reduce IL-6 and may potentially improve physical function. To assess the main effects of the angiotensin receptor blocker losartan and ω-3 as fish oil on IL-6 and 400 m walking speed, we conducted the ENRGISE Pilot multicenter randomized clinical trial.Methods: The ENRGISE Pilot enrolled participants between April 2016 and June 2017, who participated for 12 months. Participants were aged ≥70 years with mobility impairment, had IL-6 between 2.5 and 30 pg/mL, and were able to walk 400 m at baseline. Participants were randomized in three strata 2 × 2 factorial to: (i) losartan 50-100 mg/d or placebo (n = 43), (ii) fish oil 1,400-2,800 mg/d or placebo (n = 180), and (iii) with both (n = 66).Results: Two hundred eighty-nine participants were randomized (mean age 78.3 years, 47.4% women, 17.0% black). There was no effect of losartan (difference of means = -0.065 ± 0.116 [SE], 95% confidence interval [CI]: -0.293-0.163, p = .58) or fish oil (-0.020 ± 0.077, 95% CI: -0.171-0.132, p = .80) on the log of IL-6. Similarly, there was no effect of losartan (-0.025 ± 0.026, 95% CI: -0.076-0.026, p = .34) or fish oil (0.010 ± 0.017, 95% CI: -0.025-0.044, p = .58) on walking speed (m/s).Conclusions: These results do not support the use of these interventions to prevent mobility loss in older adults at risk of disability with low-grade chronic inflammation.Registration: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT02676466. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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43. Hospitalization-Associated Change in Gait Speed and Risk of Functional Limitations for Older Adults.
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Duan-Porter, Wei, Vo, Tien N, Ullman, Kristen, Langsetmo, Lisa, Strotmeyer, Elsa S, Taylor, Brent C, Santanasto, Adam J, Cawthon, Peggy M, Newman, Anne B, Simonsick, Eleanor M, Waters, Teresa M, and Ensrud, Kristine E
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OLDER people ,GENERALIZED estimating equations ,BODY mass index ,SPEED ,BODY composition - Abstract
Background: Hospitalization-associated functional decline is a common problem for older adults, but it is unclear how hospitalizations affect physical performance measures such as gait speed. We sought to determine hospitalization-associated change in gait speed and likelihood of new limitations in mobility and activities of daily living (ADLs).Methods: We used longitudinal data over 5 years from the Health, Aging and Body Composition Study, a prospective cohort of black and white community-dwelling men and women, aged 70-79 years, who had no limitations in mobility (difficulty walking 1/4 mile or climbing 10 steps) or ADLs (transferring, bathing, dressing, and eating) at baseline. Gait speed, and new self-reported limitations in mobility and ADLs were assessed annually. Selected participants (n = 2,963) had no limitations at the beginning of each 1-year interval. Hospitalizations were self-reported every 6 months and verified with medical record data. Generalized estimating equations were used to examine hospitalization-associated change in gait speed and odds of new limitations over each 1-year interval. Fully adjusted models included demographics, hospitalization within the past year, health conditions, symptoms, body mass index, and health-related behaviors.Results: In fully adjusted models, any hospitalization was associated with decrease in gait speed (-0.04 m/s; 95% confidence interval [CI]: -0.05 to -0.03) and higher odds of new limitations in mobility or ADLs (odds ratio = 1.97, 95% CI: 1.70-2.28), and separately with increased odds of new mobility limitation (odds ratio = 2.22, 95% CI: 1.90-2.60) and new ADL limitations (odds ratio = 1.84, 95% CI: 1.53-2.21). Multiple hospitalizations within a year were associated with gait speed decline (-0.06 m/s; 95% CI: -0.08 to -0.04) and greater odds of new limitations in mobility or ADLs (odds ratio = 2.96, 95% CI: 2.23-3.95).Conclusions: Functionally independent older adults experienced hospitalization-associated declines in gait speed and new limitations in mobility and ADLs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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44. A novel healthy metabolic phenotype developed among a cohort of families enriched for longevity.
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Marron, Megan M., Miljkovic, Iva, Boudreau, Robert M., Christensen, Kaare, Feitosa, Mary F., Lee, Joseph H., Sebastiani, Paola, Thyagarajan, Bharat, Wojczynski, Mary K., Zmuda, Joseph M., and Newman, Anne B.
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LONGEVITY ,BODY mass index ,FAMILIES ,WAIST circumference ,OLDER people ,C-reactive protein - Abstract
Abstract Background Long-lived individuals and their offspring have healthier metabolic characteristics than expected, such as more favorable levels of fasting glucose, insulin, and lipids than controls without longevity. Dysregulation in metabolic pathways has also shown to predict accelerated aging. Using information from the Long Life Family Study (LLFS), a multi-center study of two-generation families selected for exceptional longevity, we developed an indicator of healthy metabolism to determine whether metabolic health was more prevalent in a subset of LLFS families and whether it was heritable and associated with other metrics of healthy aging. Methods A Latent Profile Analysis was applied to age- and gender-adjusted z-scores of fasting levels of glucose, insulin, triglycerides, and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, body mass index, waist circumference, interleukin-6, and C-reactive protein. Families were defined as meeting the healthy metabolic phenotype if ≥2 and ≥50% of their offspring were classified into a latent subgroup with a profile of healthier metabolic markers than expected given age and gender relative to all LLFS offspring. Results The log odds of being classified into the latent subgroup with a healthy profile of metabolic markers was heritable (h
2 = 0.40, p < 0.001). Among 388 families, 39 (10%) met the healthy metabolic phenotype. Participants from these families had somewhat better cognition than those from remaining families. Proband-generation participants from families who met the healthy metabolic phenotype also had better pulmonary functioning and physical performance. Conclusions The better cognition, pulmonary function, and physical performance among probands from families with the healthy metabolic phenotype may indicate that this subset of LLFS families have a more extreme longevity phenotype than other LLFS families since cognitive, physical, and pulmonary function are top mortality predictors for older adults. Future work is needed to determine if rare or protective alleles confer a healthy metabolic phenotype in this subset of LLFS families with exceptional metabolism. Highlights • A healthy metabolic phenotype was heritable (h2 = 0.40, p < 0.001). • 10% of families had ≥2 and ≥50% of offspring classified as metabolically healthy. • Probands from families with healthy metabolism had better physical performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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45. Index of Healthy Aging in Chinese Older Adults: China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study.
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Wu, Chenkai, Newman, Anne B., Dong, Bi‐Rong, and Odden, Michelle C.
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HEALTH of older people , *AGING , *OLDER people , *HEALTH equity , *COMORBIDITY - Abstract
Objectives: To characterize the distribution of an index of healthy aging—the Chinese Healthy Aging Index (CHAI)—in Chinese adults aged 60 and older according to sociodemographic characteristics and geographic region and to examine the association between the CHAI and mortality, disability, and functional limitation over 4 years. Design: Nationally representative cohort study. Setting: China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study. Participants: Chinese adults aged 60 and older (N=3,740). Measurements: Six CHAI components (systolic blood pressure, peak expiratory flow, Telephone Interview for Cognitive Status, estimated glomerular filtration rate, fasting glucose, C‐reactive protein) were scored 0 (healthiest), 1, and 2 (unhealthiest) according to sex‐specific tertiles or clinically relevant cut‐points and summed to construct the CHAI (range 0–12). Results: Mean CHAI score was 5.6; 5.7% had a score of 0 to 2 (healthiest), 23.0% a score of 3 or 4, 37.5% a score of 5 or 6, and 33.8% a score of 7 to 12 (unhealthiest). Participants who were younger, more educated, and married were much more likely to have an ideal CHAI profile (score 0–2). Age‐adjusted prevalence of an ideal CHAI profile ranged from 1.7% in the south to 8.1% in the north. After multivariable adjustment, persons with a CHAI score of 3 to 12 had substantially higher odds of mortality, disability, and functional limitation than those with a score of 0 to 2. The CHAI further stratified outcomes for persons with no clinically recognizable comorbidities. Conclusion: Substantial variation exists in the CHAI according to sociodemographic characteristics and geographic regions. The CHAI could identify Chinese elderly adults with low risk of adverse outcomes and provide incremental value for risk prediction beyond clinically diagnosed comorbidities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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46. Age, Race, and Gender Factors in Incident Disability.
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Jacob, Mini E., Marron, Megan M., Boudreau, Robert M., Odden, Michelle C., Arnold, Alice M., Newman, Anne B., and Boudreau, Robert
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AGE ,RACE ,GENDER ,OLDER people ,DISABILITIES ,FUNCTIONAL assessment ,PATHOLOGICAL physiology ,AGE distribution ,BLACK people ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,POPULATION ,RESEARCH funding ,SEX distribution ,WHITE people ,ACTIVITIES of daily living ,DISEASE incidence - Abstract
Background: Incident disability rates enable the comparison of risk across populations. Understanding these by age, sex, and race is important for planning for the care of older adults and targeting prevention.Methods: We calculated incident disability rates among older adults in the Cardiovascular Health Study, a study of 5,888 older adults aged ≥ 65 years over 6 years of follow-up. Disability was defined in the following two ways: (i) self-report of disability (severe difficulty or inability) in any of six Activities of Daily Living (ADL), and (ii) mobility difficulty (any difficulty walking half a mile or climbing 10 steps). Incident disability rates were calculated as events per 100 person years for age, gender, and race groups.Results: The incidence of ADL disability, and mobility difficulty were 2.7 (2.5-2.8), and 9.8 (9.4-10.3) events per 100 person years. Women, older participants, and blacks had higher rates in both domains.Conclusion: Incidence rates are considerably different based on the domain examined as well as age, race, and gender composition of the population. Prevention efforts should focus on high risk populations and attempt to ameliorate factors that increase risk in these groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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47. Mobility-Related Consequences of Reduced Lower-Extremity Peripheral Nerve Function with Age: A Systematic Review.
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Ward, Rachel E., Caserotti, Paolo, Cauley, Jane A., Boudreau, Robert M., Goodpaster, Vinik, Aaron I., Newman, Anne B., and Strotmeyer, Elsa S.
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PERIPHERAL nervous system ,OLDER people ,AGING - Abstract
The objective of this study is to systematically review the relationship between lower-extremity peripheral nerve function and mobility in older adults. The National Library of Medicine (PubMed) was searched on March 23, 2015 with no limits on publication dates. One reviewer selected original research studies of older adults (=65 years) that assessed the relationship between lower-extremity peripheral nerve function and mobility-related outcomes. Participants, study design and methods of assessing peripheral nerve impairment were evaluated and results were reported and synthesized. Eight articles were identified, including 6 cross-sectional and 2 longitudinal studies. These articles investigated 6 elderly cohorts (4 from the U.S. and 2 from Italy): 3 community-dwelling (including 1 with only disabled women and 1 without mobility limitations at baseline), 1 with both community-dwelling and institutionalized residents, 1 from a range of residential locations, and 1 of patients with peripheral arterial disease. Mean ages ranged from 71-82 years. Nerve function was assessed by vibration threshold (n=2); sensory measures and clinical signs and symptoms of neuropathy (n=2); motor nerve conduction (n=1); and a combination of both sensory measures and motor nerve conduction (n=3). Each study found that worse peripheral nerve function was related to poor mobility, although relationships varied based on the nerve function measure and mobility domain assessed. Six studies found that the association between nerve function and mobility persisted despite adjustment for diabetes. Evidence suggests that peripheral nerve function impairment at various levels of severity is related to poor mobility independent of diabetes. Relationships varied depending on peripheral nerve measure, which may be particularly important when investigating specific biological mechanisms. Future research needs to identify risk factors for peripheral nerve decline beyond diabetes, especially those common in late-life and modifiable. Interventions to preserve nerve function should be investigated with regard to their effect on postponing or preventing disability in older adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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48. Sensory and Motor Peripheral Nerve Function and Longitudinal Changes in Quadriceps Strength.
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Ward, Rachel E., Boudreau, Robert M., Caserotti, Paolo, Harris, Tamara B., Zivkovic, Sasa, Goodpaster, Bret H., Satterfield, Suzanne, Kritchevsky, Stephen, Schwartz, Ann V., Vinik, Aaron I., Cauley, Jane A., Newman, Anne B., and Strotmeyer, Elsa S.
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NERVES ,OLDER people ,SENSORIMOTOR integration ,BODY mass index ,MUSCLES ,NEUROMUSCULAR system - Abstract
Background. Poor peripheral nerve function is common in older adults and may be a risk factor for strength decline, although this has not been assessed longitudinally. Methods. We assessed whether sensorimotor peripheral nerve function predicts strength longitudinally in 1,830 participants (age = 76.3 ± 2.8, body mass index = 27.2 ± 4.6kg/m², strength = 96.3 ± 34.7 Nm, 51.0% female, 34.8% black) from the Health ABC study. Isokinetic quadriceps strength was measured semiannually over 6 years. Peroneal motor nerve conduction amplitude and velocity were recorded. Sensory nerve function was assessed with 10-g and 1.4-g mono-filaments and average vibration detection threshold at the toe. Lower-extremity neuropathy symptoms were self-reported. Results. Worse vibration detection threshold predicted 2.4% lower strength in men and worse motor amplitude and two symptoms predicted 2.5% and 8.1% lower strength, respectively, in women. Initial 10-g monofilament insensitivity predicted 14.2% lower strength and faster strength decline in women and 6.6% lower strength in men (allp < .05). Conclusion. Poor nerve function predicted lower strength and faster strength decline. Future work should examine interventions aimed at preventing declines in strength in older adults with impaired nerve function. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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49. Comparison Between Southern Blots and qPCR Analysis of Leukocyte Telomere Length in the Health ABC Study.
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Elbers, Clara C., Garcia, Melissa E., Kimura, Masayuki, Cummings, Steven R., Nalls, Mike A., Newman, Anne B., Park, Vicki, Sanders, Jason L., Tranah, Gregory J., Tishkoff, Sarah A., Harris, Tamara B., and Aviv, Abraham
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POLYMERASE chain reaction ,LEUCOCYTES ,TELOMERES ,STATISTICAL correlation ,OLDER people ,AFRICAN Americans ,LONGITUDINAL method ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Only a few studies, primarily limited to small samples, have examined the relationship between leukocyte telomere length (LTL) data generated by Southern blots, expressed in kilobases, versus quantitative PCR data, expressed in the telomere product/a single gene product (T/S). In the present study, we compared LTL data generated by the two methods in 681 elderly participants (50% African Americans, 50% of European origin, 49.2% women, mean age 73.7±2.9 years) in the Health Aging and Body Composition Study. The correlation between the data generated by the two methods was modest (R2 = .27). Both methods captured the age effect on LTL and the longer LTL in women than in men. However, only the Southern blot method showed a significantly longer LTL in African Americans than in European decent individuals, which might be attributed to the larger measurement error of the quantitative PCR–based method than the Southern blots. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
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50. Adipose Tissue Density, a Novel Biomarker Predicting Mortality Risk in Older Adults.
- Author
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Murphy, Rachel A., Register, Thomas C., Shively, Carol A., Carr, J. Jeffrey, Ge, Yaorong, Heilbrun, Marta E., Cummings, Steven R., Koster, Annemarie, Nevitt, Michael C., Satterfield, Suzanne, Tylvasky, Frances A., Strotmeyer, Elsa S., Newman, Anne B., Simonsick, Eleanor M., Scherzinger, Ann, Goodpaster, Bret H., Launer, Lenore J., Eiriksdottir, Gudny, Sigurdsson, Sigurdur, and Sigurdsson, Gunnar
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ADIPOSE tissues ,BIOMARKERS ,OLDER people ,LEPTIN ,ADIPONECTIN ,AGING ,PROPORTIONAL hazards models ,BODY mass index - Abstract
Background. Knowledge of adipose composition in relation to mortality may help delineate inconsistent relationships between obesity and mortality in old age. We evaluated relationships between abdominal visceral adipose tissue (VAT) and subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT) density, mortality, biomarkers, and characteristics. Methods. VAT and SAT density were determined from computed tomography scans in persons aged 65 and older, Health ABC (n = 2,735) and AGES-Reykjavik (n = 5,131), and 24 nonhuman primates (NHPs). Associations between adipose density and mortality (4–13 years follow-up) were assessed with Cox proportional hazards models. In NHPs, adipose density was related to serum markers and tissue characteristics. Results. Higher density adipose tissue was associated with mortality in both studies with adjustment for risk factors including adipose area, total fat, and body mass index. In women, hazard ratio and 95% CI for the densest quintile (Q5) versus least dense (Q1) for VAT density were 1.95 (1.36–2.80; Health ABC) and 1.88 (1.31–2.69; AGES-Reykjavik) and for SAT density, 1.76 (1.35–2.28; Health ABC) and 1.56 (1.15–2.11; AGES-Reykjavik). In men, VAT density was associated with mortality in Health ABC, 1.52 (1.12–2.08), whereas SAT density was associated with mortality in both Health ABC, 1.58 (1.21–2.07), and AGES-Reykjavik, 1.43 (1.07–1.91). Higher density adipose tissue was associated with smaller adipocytes in NHPs. There were no consistent associations with inflammation in any group. Higher density adipose tissue was associated with lower serum leptin in Health ABC and NHPs, lower leptin mRNA expression in NHPs, and higher serum adiponectin in Health ABC and NHPs. Conclusion. VAT and SAT density provide a unique marker of mortality risk that does not appear to be inflammation related. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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