Zheng Lin, Hong-Fei Wang, Lu-Yan Yu, Jia Chen, Cheng-Cheng Kong, Bin Zhang, Xuan Wu, Hao-Nan Wang, Yi Cao, Ping Lin
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: The relationship between psoriasis and aging remains unclear. Biological age is considered as a tool for strong association with aging, but there is a lack of reports on the relationship between biological age and psoriasis. Therefore, this study aimed to explore the relationship between biological age and psoriasis.
Methods: Patients with psoriasis and non-psoriasis were recruited from National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) (12,973 cases), Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care (MIMIC-IV) (558 cases) and The First Clinical Medical College of Zhejiang Chinese Medical University (206 cases). Biological age was calculated using Klemera-Doubal method age (KDM-age) and phenotypic age (PhenoAge). Linear regression and logistic regression were used to explore the association between psoriasis and biological age advance. Cox regression was used to investigate the association between biological age advance and mortality. Finally, biological age advance was used to predict the death of psoriasis patients.
Results: In NHANES, linear regression showed that psoriasis led to a 0.54 advance in PhenoAge (Adjust Beta: 0.54, 95CI: 0.12-0.97, p = 0.018). The KDM-age advance due to psoriasis was not statistically significant (p = 0.754). Using data from China, we came to the new conclusion that for every unit rise in Psoriasis Area and Severity Index, PhenoAge advance rose by 0.12 (Beta: 0.12, 95CI: 0.01-0.22, p = 0.031). Using NHANES data, cox regression shows for every unit rise in PhenoAge advance patients had an 8% rise in mortality (Adjust hazard ratio: 1.08, 95CI: 1.04-1.12, p < 0.001). Using MIMIC-IV, logistic regression showed a 13% increase in mortality within 28 days of admission for every 1 unit rise in PhenoAge advance (odds ratio: 1.13, 95CI: 1.09-1.18, P < 0.001). Finally, we used PhenoAge advance to predict death, with an AUC of 0.71 in the NHANES, an ACU of 0.79 for predicting death within 1 years in the general ward of MIMIC-IV. In the ICU of MIMIC-IV, the AUC for predicting death within 28 days was 0.71.
Conclusion: Psoriasis leads to accelerated biological aging in patients, which is associated with the severity of psoriasis and more comorbidities. In addition, PhenoAge has the potential to monitor the health status of patients with psoriasis.
期刊介绍:
Immunity & Ageing is a specialist open access journal that was first published in 2004. The journal focuses on the impact of ageing on immune systems, the influence of aged immune systems on organismal well-being and longevity, age-associated diseases with immune etiology, and potential immune interventions to increase health span. All articles published in Immunity & Ageing are indexed in the following databases: Biological Abstracts, BIOSIS, CAS, Citebase, DOAJ, Embase, Google Scholar, Journal Citation Reports/Science Edition, OAIster, PubMed, PubMed Central, Science Citation Index Expanded, SCImago, Scopus, SOCOLAR, and Zetoc.