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Educational Mobility, Pace of Aging, and Lifespan Among Participants in the Framingham Heart Study. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • People with higher education levels tend to live longer and experience better health, potentially due to slower biological aging.
  • The study aimed to investigate if upward educational mobility is linked to slower biological aging and improved longevity using data from three generations of the Framingham Heart Study.
  • The analysis included 3101 participants, measuring biological aging through DNA-methylation data, and aimed to identify the relationship between educational outcomes and aging rates.

Article Abstract

Importance: People who complete more education live longer lives with better health. New evidence suggests that these benefits operate through a slowed pace of biological aging. If so, measurements of the pace of biological aging could offer intermediate end points for studies of how interventions to promote education will affect healthy longevity.

Objective: To test the hypothesis that upward educational mobility is associated with a slower pace of biological aging and increased longevity.

Design, Setting, And Participants: This prospective cohort study analyzed data from 3 generations of participants in the Framingham Heart Study: (1) the original cohort, enrolled beginning in 1948; (2) the Offspring cohort, enrolled beginning in 1971; and (3) the Gen3 cohort, enrolled beginning in 2002. A 3-generation database was constructed to quantify intergenerational educational mobility. Mobility data were linked with blood DNA-methylation data collected from the Offspring cohort in 2005 to 2008 (n = 1652) and the Gen3 cohort in 2009 to 2011 (n = 1449). Follow-up is ongoing. Data analysis was conducted from June 2022 to November 2023 using data obtained from the National Institutes of Health database of Genotypes and Phenotypes (dbGaP).

Exposure: Educational mobility was measured by comparing participants' educational outcomes with those of their parents.

Main Outcomes And Measures: The pace of biological aging was measured from whole-blood DNA-methylation data using the DunedinPACE epigenetic clock. For comparison purposes, the analysis was repeated using 4 other epigenetic clocks. Survival follow-up was conducted through 2019.

Results: This study analyzed data from 3101 participants from the Framingham Heart Study; 1652 were in the Offspring cohort (mean [SD] age, 65.57 [9.22] years; 764 [46.2%] male) and 1449 were in the Gen3 cohort (mean [SD] age, 45.38 [7.83] years; 691 [47.7%] male). Participants who were upwardly mobile in educational terms tended to have slower pace of aging in later life (r = -0.18 [95% CI, -0.23 to -0.13]; P < .001). This pattern of association was similar across generations and held in within-family sibling comparisons. There were 402 Offspring cohort participants who died over the follow-up period. Upward educational mobility was associated with lower mortality risk (hazard ratio, 0.89 [95% CI, 0.81 to 0.98]; P = .01). Slower pace of aging accounted for approximately half of this association.

Conclusions And Relevance: This cohort study's findings support the hypothesis that interventions to promote educational attainment may slow the pace of biological aging and promote longevity. Epigenetic clocks have potential as near-term outcome measures of intervention effects on healthy aging. Experimental evidence is needed to confirm findings.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10907927PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.0655DOI Listing

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