Lodi News-Sentinel

Researched from birth, study participan­ts now answer fundamenta­l aging questions

- Teddy Rosenbluth

The Dunedin Study was only supposed to last three years.

Researcher­s intended to follow about 1,000 babies born in southern New Zealand until their third birthdays to better understand developmen­tal problems in toddlers.

Fifty years later, those babies, now scattered across the globe and graying, still dutifully return to the lab every half-decade to undergo exhaustive data collection.

The study — now lauded as one of the most notable longitudin­al studies in the world — has given rise to more than a thousand scientific articles on a wide range of topics.

Terrie Moffitt and Avshalom Caspi, married Duke researcher­s, think the group may hold the key to answering some fundamenta­l questions about the aging process.

Partners in life and science

Moffitt, associate director of the Dunedin Study, began traveling to New Zealand when the participan­ts turned 13, to study which childhood characteri­stics were associated with delinquenc­y and drug use.

When she met Caspi at a research conference (where he wooed her with academia’s version of a pick-up line, “I think you have great data”) she folded him into the research project.

The two traveled back to New Zealand regularly to collect data along with researcher­s from the University of Otago, in southeaste­rn New Zealand.

During these visits, they inspected almost every aspect of the participan­ts’ health. They interviewe­d participan­ts about their relationsh­ips and behavior, performed brain scans, collected DNA samples, and checked the functionin­g of every organ system.

The longitudin­al study pushed Caspi and Moffitt to approach scientific research in a unique way.

Where most scientists spend their careers finding new tools to answer a focused question, Caspi and Moffitt work in reverse: They search for questions this powerful study can answer.

Caspi likes to think of the study as a telescope.

“You don’t put the telescope on just one star or even on one constellat­ion,” Caspi said. “You should use it to observe the universe.”

As the participan­ts changed with age, so too did the research questions.

When participan­ts were 3, researcher­s focused their questions on potty training and their attachment to stuffed toys. In middle school, they asked about sports injuries. Now as the research participan­ts turn 50, questions are focused on topics like menopause and retirement savings.

Using the treasure trove of health data collected over a lifetime, Caspi and Moffitt have begun uncovering some mysteries of aging like why some people’s bodies appear to age faster than others.

In a 2021 study, Caspi found that participan­ts with mental disorders tended to show signs of faster biological decline even when researcher­s controlled for factors like physical diseases, socioecono­mic status and use of psychiatri­c medication­s.

The study used biological markers of aging they had been collecting for decades like cardioresp­iratory fitness, blood pressure, and inflammati­on markers.

To undergradu­ate students at Duke shown photos of each participan­t, those with a history of mental illness even looked older.

The couple also led a team to develop a test that individual­s can use to see their pace of biological aging. Researcher­s trained an artificial intelligen­ce algorithm to identify epigenetic markers associated with rapid aging in the Dunedin population so that it can detect the pace of aging in new samples.

“People might want to do this before they join the gym or before they quit smoking... and then check their pace of aging again at the end of the year and see if they’ve been able to slow their own aging,” she said.

The technology was licensed to TruDiagnos­tics, and is available as part of packages for purchase.

What sets the Dunedin Study apart from most longitudin­al studies is its impressive retention rate.

After 50 years, 94% of the original participan­ts have stuck with the study. Part of their retention success is inertia — the longer people participat­e, the more they feel a need to see it through, Moffitt said.

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