4.5 Article

Early life adversity and age acceleration at mid-life and older ages indexed using the next-generation GrimAge and Pace of Aging epigenetic clocks

期刊

PSYCHONEUROENDOCRINOLOGY
卷 137, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2021.105643

关键词

Early life adversity; Childhood trauma; Epigenetic clocks; GrimAge; Pace of Aging

资金

  1. Health Research Board (HRB) of Ireland under an Emerging Investigator Award [EIA-2017-012]
  2. LIFEPATH grant [633666]
  3. Irish Government
  4. Atlantic Philanthropies
  5. Irish Life plc
  6. Health Research Board (HRB) [EIA-2017-012] Funding Source: Health Research Board (HRB)

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This study explores the association between childhood adversity and epigenetic age acceleration in mid-life and older ages. It finds that childhood poverty is significantly associated with accelerated biological aging, and that lifetime smoking explains a substantial portion of the increased risk of age acceleration in individuals who experienced childhood poverty.
Objective: This retrospective cross-sectional study was designed to explore whether the experience of childhood adversity was associated with epigenetic age acceleration in mid-life and older ages using the next generation GrimAge and Pace of Aging DNA methylation clocks. Method: The study involved a sub-sample of 490 individuals aged 50-87 years of age participating in the Irish Longitudinal Study on Aging (TILDA); a large nationally representative prospective cohort study of aging in Ireland. Childhood adversity was ascertained via self-report using 5-items that were deemed to indicate potentially nefarious childhood exposures, including growing up poor, death of a parent, parental substance abuse in the family, childhood physical abuse, and childhood sexual abuse. Results: Only childhood poverty was associated with significant epigenetic age acceleration according to the GrimAge and Pace of Aging clocks, hastening biological aging by 2.04 years [CI= 1.07, 3.00; p < 0.001] and 1.16 years [CI= 0.11, 2.21; p = 0.030] respectively. Analysis of the dose-response pattern revealed each additional adversity was associated with 0.69 years of age acceleration [CI= 0.23, 1.15; p = 0.004] according to the GrimAge clock. Mediation analysis suggested that lifetime smoking explains a substantial portion (>50%) of the excess risk of age acceleration amongst those who experienced childhood poverty. Conclusions: This study adds to the growing body of evidence which implicates early life adversity, particularly deprivation as a potential precipitant of earlier biological aging, and implicates smoking-related changes to DNA methylation processes as a candidate pathway and mechanism through which the social environment gets transduced at a biological level to hasten the aging process.

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