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Prospective Study of Ageing Trajectories in the European DO-HEALTH Study


Ghisla, Virginia. Prospective Study of Ageing Trajectories in the European DO-HEALTH Study. 2022, University of Zurich, Faculty of Medicine.

Abstract

Introduction: Ageing trajectories range from delayed ageing with extended health to accelerated ageing, with an increased risk of frailty. We evaluated the prevalence and prospective change between health states among community-dwelling European older adults.

Methods: This prospective study is a secondary analysis of DO-HEALTH, a randomized trial that included adults aged 70 years and older across 5 European countries. Healthy agers (HA) fulfilled the Nurses' Health Study healthy ageing criteria and accelerated agers were non-HA being at least pre-frail according to the Fried frailty criteria. We assessed the proportion of participants changing between health states over 4 assessments and evaluated the odds of changing to a more favourable category. To increase reliability and avoid regression to the mean, we averaged the first 2 years and compared them to the average of the last 2 years.

Results: Of 2,157 participants, 12.4% were excluded for meeting both healthy ageing and pre-frailty criteria simultaneously. Among the remaining 1,889 participants (mean age 75.1 years, 60.9% female), 23.1% were initially HA, 44.4% were non-HA but not pre-frail, and 32.6% were pre-frail or frail. Subsequently, 65.3% remained in the same health state, 12.0% improved to a healthier state, and 22.8% progressed to a less advantageous state. After adjusting for sex, study centre, treatment, and body mass index, each year of age was associated with 6% lower odds of improving health states. Women had 35% higher odds than men of following a disadvantageous trajectory.

Conclusion: We observed dynamic trajectories of ageing where transitioning to a healthier state became less likely with advancing age and among women.

Keywords: Ageing trajectories; Healthy ageing; Successful ageing

Abstract

Introduction: Ageing trajectories range from delayed ageing with extended health to accelerated ageing, with an increased risk of frailty. We evaluated the prevalence and prospective change between health states among community-dwelling European older adults.

Methods: This prospective study is a secondary analysis of DO-HEALTH, a randomized trial that included adults aged 70 years and older across 5 European countries. Healthy agers (HA) fulfilled the Nurses' Health Study healthy ageing criteria and accelerated agers were non-HA being at least pre-frail according to the Fried frailty criteria. We assessed the proportion of participants changing between health states over 4 assessments and evaluated the odds of changing to a more favourable category. To increase reliability and avoid regression to the mean, we averaged the first 2 years and compared them to the average of the last 2 years.

Results: Of 2,157 participants, 12.4% were excluded for meeting both healthy ageing and pre-frailty criteria simultaneously. Among the remaining 1,889 participants (mean age 75.1 years, 60.9% female), 23.1% were initially HA, 44.4% were non-HA but not pre-frail, and 32.6% were pre-frail or frail. Subsequently, 65.3% remained in the same health state, 12.0% improved to a healthier state, and 22.8% progressed to a less advantageous state. After adjusting for sex, study centre, treatment, and body mass index, each year of age was associated with 6% lower odds of improving health states. Women had 35% higher odds than men of following a disadvantageous trajectory.

Conclusion: We observed dynamic trajectories of ageing where transitioning to a healthier state became less likely with advancing age and among women.

Keywords: Ageing trajectories; Healthy ageing; Successful ageing

Statistics

Additional indexing

Item Type:Dissertation (monographical)
Referees:Chocano-Bedoya Patricia, Bischoff-Ferrari H A
Communities & Collections:04 Faculty of Medicine > University Hospital Zurich > Department of Aging Medicine
UZH Dissertations
Dewey Decimal Classification:610 Medicine & health
Language:German
Date:16 June 2022
Deposited On:15 Nov 2022 14:41
Last Modified:21 Feb 2023 09:44
OA Status:Closed
Free access at:Related URL. An embargo period may apply.
Related URLs:https://www.zora.uzh.ch/id/eprint/218632/
https://www.karger.com/Article/FullText/523923
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35443250/
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