4.8 Article

A clinically meaningful metric of immune age derived from high-dimensional longitudinal monitoring

Journal

NATURE MEDICINE
Volume 25, Issue 3, Pages 487-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41591-019-0381-y

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Funding

  1. Ellison Medical Foundation
  2. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  3. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [U19 AI057229, U19 AI090019]
  4. Israeli Science Foundation [1365/12]
  5. Rappaport Institute
  6. National Institutes of Health (NIH)/National Center for Research Resources Clinical and Translational Science Awards [UL1 RR025744]
  7. Kolk family awards

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Immune responses generally decline with age. However, the dynamics of this process at the individual level have not been characterized, hindering quantification of an individual's immune age. Here, we use multiple 'omics' technologies to capture population-and individual-level changes in the human immune system of 135 healthy adult individuals of different ages sampled longitudinally over a nine-year period. We observed high inter-individual variability in the rates of change of cellular frequencies that was dictated by their baseline values, allowing identification of steady-state levels toward which a cell subset converged and the ordered convergence of multiple cell subsets toward an older adult homeostasis. These data form a high-dimensional trajectory of immune aging (IMM-AGE) that describes a person's immune status better than chronological age. We show that the IMM-AGE score predicted all-cause mortality beyond well-established risk factors in the Framingham Heart Study, establishing its potential use in clinics for identification of patients at risk.

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