Content area

Abstract

Biological aging of human organ systems reflects the interplay of age, chronic disease, lifestyle and genetic risk. Using longitudinal brain imaging and physiological phenotypes from the UK Biobank, we establish normative models of biological age for three brain and seven body systems. Here we find that an organ’s biological age selectively influences the aging of other organ systems, revealing a multiorgan aging network. We report organ age profiles for 16 chronic diseases, where advanced biological aging extends from the organ of primary disease to multiple systems. Advanced body age associates with several lifestyle and environmental factors, leukocyte telomere lengths and mortality risk, and predicts survival time (area under the curve of 0.77) and premature death (area under the curve of 0.86). Our work reveals the multisystem nature of human aging in health and chronic disease. It may enable early identification of individuals at increased risk of aging-related morbidity and inform new strategies to potentially limit organ-specific aging in such individuals.

Organ-specific aging clocks for multiple brain and body systems show that the biological age of one organ system selectively influences the aging of multiple other systems via characteristic aging pathways.

Details

Title
Heterogeneous aging across multiple organ systems and prediction of chronic disease and mortality
Pages
1221-1231
Publication year
2023
Publication date
May 2023
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
10788956
e-ISSN
1546170X
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2817277569
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group May 2023