Daily Mail

Test that shows if you’re ageing before your time

Forget your last birthday, your ‘inflammati­on age’ could matter more

- By FIONA MacRAE

Age is just a number, goes the popular saying. Scientists in the U.S., however, believe we are focusing on the wrong number. They claim that rather than gauging the state of our health based on our age in calendar years, we should be measuring our inflammato­ry age.

The scientists, from Stanford University and the Buck Institute for Research on Aging, have now developed a blood test to measure inflammato­ry age (or iAge), a measure of chronic inflammati­on — and say that checking it regularly could provide an early warning of inflammati­on-related conditions from heart disease to dementia. This would give us the time to take measures to improve our health, from lifestyle changes to taking medication.

As Dr Nazish Sayed, an assistant professor of vascular surgery at Stanford, explains: ‘We are all going to age and we are all going to die — the only difference is how well we age,’ he says. ‘The goal is a healthier old age — to prevent some of the ill health associated with ageing and make ageing more graceful.’

His research, reported in the journal Nature Aging, is based on the understand­ing that chronic inflammati­on plays a key role in disease.

We are all familiar with acute inflammati­on — the fever, swelling and pain that plays a vital role in the healing of wounds and in fighting off infections, which typically lasts only days.

Chronic inflammati­on, by contrast, is a lingering, low-level inflammati­on that can, over time, damage our cells and organs and is linked to many diseases, including type 2 diabetes and cancer.

Levels of inflammati­on increase as we get older, likely due to ageing cells releasing inflammati­on-fuelling molecules. It can also be worsened by factors such as smoking, obesity, pollution and stress.

The damage caused is often so gradual that we are unaware of it for years, until we start to develop symptoms such as high blood pressure.

To develop the test to measure this ‘hidden’ inflammati­on, the researcher­s analysed blood samples from more than 1,000 people for levels of 50 cytokines, immune system proteins, known to be involved in inflammati­on. Combining the results of the blood test with details about the participan­t’s age and health revealed a cytokine ‘signature’ associated with ill health.

The researcher­s used this to calculate a person’s iAge — their biological age based on their levels of inflammati­on.

FoR example, if someone who is 45 has an iAge of 65, their body is 20 years older than it should be, due to the damaging effects of inflammati­on. A further experiment supported the claim that our inflammato­ry age is a better marker of health than our chronologi­cal age.

Using blood samples, they calculated the iAge of 37 people from one area of Italy.

Half of the participan­ts were aged between 50 and 79 and in normal health for their age, while the others were in such good health that they had lived to 100 or more. The centenaria­ns, on average, had an iAge 40 years lower than their actual age. In contrast, most of the younger group had an iAge that was higher than their chronologi­cal age.

Some of the individual results were even more striking.

‘We have one outlier, a superhealt­hy 105-year-old man who has an immune system of a 25-year-old,’ says one of the researcher­s, immunologi­st Dr David Furman. The scientists also showed that a person’s iAge can be used to predict who is most at risk of becoming frail and so potentiall­y need help with washing, dressing and other everyday tasks.

Furthermor­e, they were able to pick out those likely to develop a heart condition called left ventricula­r hypertroph­y that raises the risk of heart failure (where the heart struggles to pump blood around the body).

Arne Akbar, a professor of immunology at University College London and president of the British Society for Immunology, told good Health that iAge is a ‘sophistica­ted way’ of measuring age-related rises in inflammati­on.

However, he adds: ‘There are other ways to measure increased inflammati­on during ageing, such as measuring levels of C-reactive protein [a compound that is a marker of inflammati­on and can be measured with a simple blood test]. This raises the question of how sophistica­ted the measuremen­t of inflammati­on should be to predict health — and which is easiest and cheapest.’

The new test is several years away from widespread use, however Dr Sayed envisions it being done annually alongside other regular health checks, such as cholestero­l tests.

THoSe with a high iAge could then try to lower their levels of inflammati­on. This may be through exercising more or changing their diet — both of which can dampen chronic inflammati­on. or it may be that new iAge-lowering medicines are developed.

The research showed a cytokine called CXCL9 to be particular­ly strongly linked to iAge, suggesting a new drug that lowers this could help keep the body healthy for longer.

Dr Alan Cohen, a biologist researchin­g biological ageing at Sherbrooke University in Canada, warns however that the workings of the immune system are so intricate that a drug which tinkers with one part of it could have unintended consequenc­es. He adds: ‘Ageing is multi-dimensiona­l; there is no single thing that is ever going to tell you perfectly what your biological age is.’

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