The embodiment of parental death in early life through accelerated epigenetic aging: Implications for understanding how parental death before 18 shapes age-related health risk among older adults

IF 3.6 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Ssm-Population Health Pub Date : 2024-02-29 DOI:10.1016/j.ssmph.2024.101648
Mateo P. Farina , Eric T. Klopack , Debra Umberson , Eileen M. Crimmins
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Abstract

Parental death in early life has been linked to various adverse health outcomes in older adulthood. This study extends prior research to evaluate how parental death in early life is tied to accelerated epigenetic aging, a potentially important biological mechanism from which social and environmental exposures impact age-related health. We used data from the 2016 Venous Blood Study (VBS), a component of the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), to examine the association between parental death in early life and accelerated epigenetic aging as measured by three widely used epigenetic clocks (PCPhenoAge, PCGrimAge, and DunedinPACE). We also assessed whether some of the association is explained by differences in educational attainment, depressive symptoms, and smoking behavior. Methods included a series of linear regression models and formal mediation analysis. Findings indicated that parental death in early life is associated with accelerated epigenetic aging for PCPhenoAge and DunedinPACE. The inclusion of educational attainment, depressive symptoms, and smoking behavior attenuated this association, with formal mediation analysis providing additional support for these observations. Parental death in early life may be one of the most difficult experiences an individual may face. The elevated biological risk associated with parental death in early life may operate through immediate changes but also through more downstream risk factors. This study highlights how early life adversity can set in motion biological changes that have lifelong consequences.

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父母早逝通过加速表观遗传衰老而体现出来:了解父母在 18 岁前去世如何影响老年人与年龄相关的健康风险的意义
父母早逝与成年后的各种不良健康结果有关。本研究扩展了之前的研究,以评估父母早年死亡如何与表观遗传衰老加速联系在一起,表观遗传衰老加速是社会和环境暴露影响年龄相关健康的潜在重要生物机制。我们利用健康与退休研究(HRS)的一个组成部分--2016 年静脉血研究(VBS)的数据,研究了早年父母死亡与表观遗传加速衰老之间的关联,这是由三种广泛使用的表观遗传时钟(PCPhenoAge、PCGrimAge 和 DunedinPACE)测量的。我们还评估了教育程度、抑郁症状和吸烟行为的差异是否可以解释这种关联。研究方法包括一系列线性回归模型和正式的中介分析。研究结果表明,父母早年死亡与 PCPhenoAge 和 DunedinPACE 的表观遗传衰老加速有关。纳入教育程度、抑郁症状和吸烟行为后,这种关联有所减弱,正式的中介分析为这些观察结果提供了更多支持。父母早年去世可能是一个人可能面临的最艰难的经历之一。与早年父母死亡相关的生物风险升高可能是通过直接的变化产生的,但也可能是通过更多的下游风险因素产生的。这项研究强调了生命早期的逆境如何引发生物变化,从而产生终生影响。
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来源期刊
Ssm-Population Health
Ssm-Population Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
2.10%
发文量
298
审稿时长
101 days
期刊介绍: SSM - Population Health. The new online only, open access, peer reviewed journal in all areas relating Social Science research to population health. SSM - Population Health shares the same Editors-in Chief and general approach to manuscripts as its sister journal, Social Science & Medicine. The journal takes a broad approach to the field especially welcoming interdisciplinary papers from across the Social Sciences and allied areas. SSM - Population Health offers an alternative outlet for work which might not be considered, or is classed as ''out of scope'' elsewhere, and prioritizes fast peer review and publication to the benefit of authors and readers. The journal welcomes all types of paper from traditional primary research articles, replication studies, short communications, methodological studies, instrument validation, opinion pieces, literature reviews, etc. SSM - Population Health also offers the opportunity to publish special issues or sections to reflect current interest and research in topical or developing areas. The journal fully supports authors wanting to present their research in an innovative fashion though the use of multimedia formats.
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