4.6 Article

Late-Life Factors Associated with Healthy Aging in Older Men

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY
Volume 62, Issue 5, Pages 880-888

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jgs.12796

Keywords

healthy aging; risk factors; longevity; longitudinal cohort study; late-life

Funding

  1. NIH
  2. John A. Hartford Center of Excellence in Geriatrics, Department of Geriatric Medicine, John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawaii
  3. Kuakini Medical Center
  4. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [N01-AG-4-2149, 5 U01 AG019349-05, 5R01AG027060-06, 5R01AG038707-02]
  5. National Institutes of Health (NIH) (National Institute on Aging) [1R13AG041931]
  6. National Institutes of Health (NIH) (National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute) [N01-HC-05102]

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ObjectivesTo identify potentially modifiable late-life biological, lifestyle, and sociodemographic factors associated with overall and healthy survival to age 85. DesignProspective longitudinal cohort study with 21years of follow-up (1991-2012). SettingHawaii Lifespan Study. ParticipantsAmerican men of Japanese ancestry (mean age 75.7, range 71-82) without baseline major clinical morbidity and functional impairments (N=1,292). MeasurementsOverall survival and healthy survival (free from six major chronic diseases and without physical or cognitive impairment) to age 85. Factors were measured at late-life baseline examinations (1991-1993). ResultsOf 1,292 participants, 1,000 (77%) survived to 85 (34% healthy) and 309 (24%) to 95 (<1% healthy). Late-life factors associated with survival and healthy survival included biological (body mass index, ankle-brachial index, cognitive score, blood pressure, inflammatory markers), lifestyle (smoking, alcohol use, physical activity), and sociodemographic factors (education, marital status). Cumulative late-life baseline risk factor models demonstrated that age-standardized (at 70) probability of survival to 95 ranged from 27% (no factors) to 7% (5 factors); probability of survival to 100 ranged from 4% (no factors) to 0.1% (5 factors). Age-standardized (at 70) probability of healthy survival to 90 ranged from 4% (no factors) to 0.01% (5 factors). There were nine healthy survivors at 95 and one healthy survivor at 100. ConclusionSeveral potentially modifiable risk factors in men in late life (mean age 75.7) were associated with markedly greater probability of subsequent healthy survival and longevity.

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