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Accelerated aging mediates the associations of unhealthy lifestyles with cardiovascular disease, cancer, and mortality

Xueqin Li, Xingqi Cao, Jingyun Zhang, Jinjing Fu, Mayila Mohedaner, Danzengzhuoga, Xiaoyi Sun, Gan Yang, Zhenqing Yang, Chia‐Ling Kuo, Xi Chen, Alan A. Cohen, Zuyun Liu

Journal of the American Geriatrics Society · 2023 · ▲ 98 citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND: With two well-validated aging measures capturing mortality and morbidity risk, this study examined whether and to what extent aging mediates the associations of unhealthy lifestyles with adverse health outcomes. METHODS: Data were from 405,944 adults (40-69 years) from UK Biobank (UKB) and 9972 adults (20-84 years) from the US National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). An unhealthy lifestyles score (range: 0-5) was constructed based on five factors (smoking, drinking, physical inactivity, unhealthy body mass index, and unhealthy diet). Two aging measures, Phenotypic Age Acceleration (PhenoAgeAccel) and Biological Age Acceleration (BioAgeAccel) were calculated using nine and seven blood biomarkers, respectively, with a higher value indicating the acceleration of aging. The outcomes included incident cardiovascular disease (CVD), incident cancer, and all-cause mortality in UKB; CVD mortality, cancer mortality, and all-cause mortality in NHANES. A general linear regression model, Cox proportional hazards model, and formal mediation analysis were performed. RESULTS: The unhealthy lifestyles score was positively associated with PhenoAgeAccel (UKB: β = 0.741; NHANES: β = 0.874, all p < 0.001). We further confirmed the respective associations of PhenoAgeAccel and unhealthy lifestyles with the outcomes in UKB and NHANES. The mediation proportion of PhenoAgeAccel in associations of unhealthy lifestyles with incident CVD, incident cancer, and all-cause mortality were 20.0%, 17.8%, and 26.6% (all p < 0.001) in UKB, respectively. Similar results were found in NHANES. The findings were robust when using another aging measure-BioAgeAccel. CONCLUSIONS: Accelerated aging partially mediated the associations of lifestyles with CVD, cancer, and mortality in UK and US populations. The findings reveal a novel pathway and the potential of geroprotective programs in mitigating health inequality in late life beyond lifestyle interventions.

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Provenance

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1111/jgs.18611
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2026-06-14 MST

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APA
Li, X., Cao, X., Zhang, J., Fu, J., Mohedaner, M., Danzengzhuoga, Sun, X., Yang, G., Yang, Z., Kuo, C., Chen, X., Cohen, A.A., &amp; Liu, Z. (2023). Accelerated aging mediates the associations of unhealthy lifestyles with cardiovascular disease, cancer, and mortality. <em>Journal of the American Geriatrics Society</em>. https://doi.org/10.1111/jgs.18611
Vancouver
Li X, Cao X, Zhang J, Fu J, Mohedaner M, Danzengzhuoga, et al. Accelerated aging mediates the associations of unhealthy lifestyles with cardiovascular disease, cancer, and mortality. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society. 2023. doi:10.1111/jgs.18611.
BibTeX
@unpublished{xueqin2023Accele, title = {Accelerated aging mediates the associations of unhealthy lifestyles with cardiovascular disease, cancer, and mortality}, author = {Xueqin Li and Xingqi Cao and Jingyun Zhang and Jinjing Fu and Mayila Mohedaner and Danzengzhuoga and Xiaoyi Sun and Gan Yang and Zhenqing Yang and Chia‐Ling Kuo and Xi Chen and Alan A. Cohen and Zuyun Liu}, journal = {Journal of the American Geriatrics Society}, year = {2023}, doi = {10.1111/jgs.18611}, }

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