| Literature DB >> 26039142 |
Evelyn Barron1, Jose Lara1, Martin White2, John C Mathers1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Lifespan and the proportion of older people in the population are increasing, with far reaching consequences for the social, political and economic landscape. Unless accompanied by an increase in health span, increases in age-related diseases will increase the burden on health care resources. Intervention studies to enhance healthy ageing need appropriate outcome measures, such as blood-borne biomarkers, which are easily obtainable, cost-effective, and widely accepted. To date there have been no systematic reviews of blood-borne biomarkers of mortality. AIM: To conduct a systematic review to identify available blood-borne biomarkers of mortality that can be used to predict healthy ageing post-retirement.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26039142 PMCID: PMC4454670 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0127550
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1PRISMA diagram.
Prisma diagram showing the number of references identified in the search and the number of inclusions and exclusions at each stage.
Study characteristics.
| F | Location | Cohort | Enrolment period | Sample size | Mean length of follow up (years) | Age | Sex | Biomarker (Interquartile range of concentration or mean (SD)) | Type of mortality | Confounders adjusted for | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean±SD (Range) | Male | Female | |||||||||
|
| Germany | MEMO | 1997–1998 | 385 | 9 | 72.7±N/A (65–83) | 195 (53%) | 174 (47%) | Il-1b (pg/ml) (-)Il4sR (pg/ml) (-)Il-6 (pg/ml) (<0.68–2,19)Il-8 (pg/ml) (<5.58–8.39)Il-10 (pg/ml) (<1.41–2.97)Il-12 (pg/ml) (-)TNFa (ng/ml) (-) | All-cause | Age, sex, smoking status |
|
| UK | Hertfordshire Ageing Study | 1994–1995 | 254 | 10 | Males 66.9±2.2Females 67.3±2.1 | 153 (60%) | 101 (40%) | WBC count (x109/L) (male 4.8–6.6, female 4.7–6.5) ESR (mm/hr) (male 4–10, female 8–20) Neutrophils (x109/L) (male 2.8–4, female 2.5–4) Monocytes (x109/L) (male 0.3–0.5, female 0.3–0.4)Lymphocytes (x109/L) (male 1.32–2, female 11.4–2.1) Albumin (g/L) (male 42.7 (2.0) female 42.3 (2.0))SHBG (nmol/L) (male 27.9–48.3, female 34.2–72.9) Testosterone (nmol/L) (male 11.1–20.3)Haemoglobin (g/L) (male 14.5 (1) female 13.5 (0.9)) TSH (mU/L) (male 1.2–2.3, female 1.5–3.3) T4 (pmol/L) (male 13.2–15.6, female 12.6–15.3) IL-1b (pg/mL) (male 5.6–17.7 female 11.7–26.2) IL-6 (pg/mL) (male 0.2–2.0 female 0.4–2.0) IL-10 (pg/mL) (male 2.5–4.7 female 0.3–2.1) CRP (mg/L) (male 0.9–4.0 female 1.1–5.6) DHEAS (nmol/L) (male 1734–2888 female 797–2261) Cortisol (nmol/L) (male 235–285 female 210–349) Cortisol:DHEAS ratio (male 0.09–0.17 female 0.1–0.38) | All-cause | Age, alcohol, intake, BMI, comorbidity, height, sex, social class, walking speed |
|
| France | Pathologies Oculaires Liées à l’Age | 1995–1997 | 1,441 | 9 | 70±6.6 (60+) | 553 (38%) | 888 (62%) | TC (mmol/L) (male <4.95–6.18 female <5.23–6.61) Albumin (g/L) (male <39.44–44.78 female <38.93–43.94) TTR (g/L) (male <0.24–0.3 female <0.21–0.27) CRP (mg/L) (male <0.86–3.31 female <0.79–3.27) AAG (g/L) (<0.61–0.90) | All-cause Cancer CVD | Educational level, perceived health, smoking (current) |
|
| USA | Lipid Research Clinics Program Follow-up Study | 1972–1976 | 4,462 | 19 | 50.1±6.6 (40–64) | 2,406 (54%) | 2,056 (46%) | Non HDL-C (mmol/L & mg/dL) (male 4.69 (1.22) female 4.45 (1.41)) HDL-C (mmol/L & mg/dL) (male 1.16 (0.33) female 1.54 (0.45)) LDL-C (mmol/L & mg/dL) 3.85 (1.05) female 3.89 (1.16) | All-cause CVD | Age, alcohol intake, body mass index, fasting glucose, hypertension, smoking |
|
| UK | Meta-analysis of 54 studies | - | 160,309 | 1.31 million person years at risk | 60±8 | 84138 (52%) | 76171 (48%) | CRP (mg/L) 1.11 | Vascular and non-vascular mortality | Age, alcohol consumption, BMI, diabetes, HDL cholesterol, non-HDL cholesterol, sex, study, systolic blood pressure, smoking, triglyceride concentration |
|
| Denmark | MONICA10 | 1993–1994 | 2,602 | 13.6 (median) | 56±-(41–71) | - | - | SUPAR (ng/mL) (1.3–19.9) CRP (mg/L) (<1–3) | All-cause Cancer CVD | Age, sex, smoking status |
|
| USA | REGARDS | 2003–2007 | 17,845 | 4.52 (median) | 65.6±-(45+) | 6782 (38%) | 11063 (62%) | CRP (mg/L) (1.28–12.47) WBC count (x109cells/L) (5.09–8.21) Albumin (g/dL) (3.7–4.3) | All-cause | Age, alcohol use, educational level, HDL-C, income, LDL-C medical history, physical activity frequency race, region, sex, smoking, triglycerides and waist circumference |
|
| Korea | - | 2003–2009 | 9996 | 4.4 (median) | 69.7±4.3(65+) | 5491(54.9%) | 4505(45.1%) | White blood cells (cells/μL) (<4670–6610) | All-cause Cancer CVD | Age, alcohol intake, alanine aminotransferase, albumin, aspartate aminotransferase, blood pressure, body mass index, diabetes mellitus, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, exercise levels, sex, GFR, HDL-cholesterol, non-HDL cholesterol, smoking status. |
|
| Denmark | - | 1998–2000 | 626 | 5 | 67.9±10.6 (50–89) | 265 (43%) | 361 (57%) | N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide (pg/mL) (<181.7–411.1) CRP (mg/L) (2.04–2.81) | All-cause | ACE inhibitors, beta-blockers, calcium antagonists, diabetes, diuretics hypertension, ischemic heart disease, heart rate, left ventricular hypertrophy, left ventricular systolic dysfunction, serum creatinine, smoking, systolic blood pressure, total cholesterol |
|
| Germany | MONICA | 1984–1995 | 3,620 | 7.1 | 57.9±8.1 (45–74) | 3620 (100%) | 0 | CRP (mg/L) (<1–3) | All-cause Cancer CVD CHD | Age, alcohol intake, body mass index, diabetes, dyslipidemia, education, hypertension, physical activity, smoking, year of recruitment |
|
| USA | Framingham Offspring | 1971 | 3,250 | 4.6 | 61±9- | 1495 (46%) | 1755 (54%) | RANK-L (pmol/L) 0.05 (0.02–0.14) OPG (pmol/L) 5.40 (4.45–6.49) | All-cause CVD | Age, diabetes mellitus, diastolic blood pressure CRP, hypertension treatment, lipid-lowering medication serum glucose, sex, smoking, systolic blood pressure, and total/HDL cholesterol. |
|
| USA | Women’s Health Initiative Observational Study | 1994–1998 | 72242 | 6.1 | 63±7.3 (50–79) | 0 | 72242 (100%) | WBC count (x109 cells/L) (2.5–15.0) | All-cause CHD | Age, race/ethnicity, diabetes, hypertension, high cholesterol level, smoking status, body mass index, alcohol intake, physical activity, aspirin use, dietary fibre, fruit/vegetable intake, polyunsaturated/saturated fatty acid ratio, and prior use of hormone therapy. |
|
| Japan | Iwate-Kenpoku Cohort | 2002–2005 | 7,901 | 2.7 | 64±9.7 (40–80) | 7901 (100%) | 0 | C-reactive protein (mg/L) (0.1 >0.8) | All-cause | Age, body mass index, diabetes, glomerular filtration rate, high density lipoprotein cholesterol, smoking (current/past), systolic blood pressure, total cholesterol, uric acid |
|
| USA | Rochester Epidemiology Project | - | 1,991 | 5.6 (person years) | 62±10 (45+) | 952 (48%) | 1,039 (52%) | N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide (pg/mL) Brain natriuretic peptide (pg/mL) | All-cause | Age, coronary artery disease, diabetes, sex, hypertension serum creatinine, total cholesterol |
|
| USA | NHANES III | 1988–1994 | 12,258 | Until 1996 or age 90, whichever came first | Presented by quartile | - | - | Ferritin (ng/mL) (males 87–222, females 18–158) Transferrin saturation (%) (males 21–35 females 15–31) | All-cause Cancer CVD | Age, alcohol consumption, aspirin, BMI, cholesterol-lowering medication, CRP, diabetes estimated glomerular filtration rate, ethnicity, HDL cholesterol, high school education, household income, HRT, hypertensive medication, smoking status, systolic blood pressure, total cholesterol and vitamin C supplementation |
|
| Finland | Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study | 1984 & 1989 | 1,423 | 11.9 | 52.3±5.3 - | 1423 (100%) | 0 | SUA (mm/dL) 5.67 (1.01) | All-cause CVD | Age, alcohol intake, beta-blockers, blood pressure medication, BMI, cardiovascular fitness, diuretic use, examination year, exercise, family history of coronary heart disease, fasting blood glucose, fasting serum insulin, high density lipoprotein cholesterol, low density lipoprotein cholesterol, serum creatinine, socioeconomic status, smoking, systolic blood pressure, triglycerides |
|
| Japan | NIPPON | 1990 | 7,175 | 9.6 | Males 52.8±13.5 Females 51.8±13.8 (30+) | 3014 (42%) | 4161 (58%) | HDL-C (mmol/L) (1.04–1.56) | All-cause Cancer CVD | Age, alcohol intake, body mass index, cholesterol, diabetes, sex, hypertension, smoking triglycerides |
|
| Austria | Vorarlberg Health Monitoring and Promotion Program | 1985–2005 | 28,613 | 15.2 (median) | 62.3±8.8 (50–95.3) | 0 | 28,613 (100%) | Serum uric acid (mg/dL) 4.6 (1.3) | CVD | Age, blood pressure, gamma-glutamyl-transferase, total cholesterol, triglycerides |
|
| USA | Framingham Heart Study | - | 3,035 | 8.9 (median) 11.3 (maximum) | 61±9- | 1412 (47%) | 1623 (53%) | CRP 0.82(1.12) Fibrinogen 5.92 (0.19)IL-6 1.07 (0.71) ICAM-1 5.52 (0.25) La-PlA2: mass 5.65 (0.32), activity 493 (0.25) MCP-1 5.74 (0.34) Myeloperoxidase 3.71 (0.57) CD40 ligand 0.41(1.23) P-selectin 3.57 (0.73) TNFRII 7.62 (0.31) | All-cause CVD | Age, BMI, current smoking, diabetes mellitus, hypertension treatment. Sex, systolic blood pressure and total/high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol. |
|
| USA | Framingham Offspring | 1971 | 922 | 9.9,12.7 (maximum) | 58(10)- | 406 (44%) | 516 (56%) | MMP-9 (% detectable) 20 TIMP-1 (ng/mL) 20 (4.0) PIIINP (ng/mL) 4.0 (3.8) | All-cause CVD | Age, BMI, current smoking, diabetes mellitus, hypertension treatment, LVM and LV sampling group. Sex, systolic blood pressure, and total cholesterol/ high-density lipoprotein cholesterol ratio |
|
| UK | British Regional Heart Study | 1978–1980 | 3,649 | 9 | Mean age presented by quartile(60–79) | 3,649 (100%) | 0 | CRP (-) NT-proBNP (pg/mL) (without CVD 40–151, with CVD 85–384) | CVD | Alcohol intake, anaemia, BMI, diabetes, eGFR, physical activity, smoking status and social class |
|
| UK | West of Scotland Coronary Prevention Study | (N/A) | 6,595 | 14.7 (median) | -(45–65) | 6595 (100%) | 0 | CRP (mg/L) 1.73 (4.60) NT-proBNP (pg/mL) 28.0 (61.0) | All-cause CVD | Age, BMI, C-reactive protein, diabetes, HDL and LDL cholesterol, history of angina, hypertension medication, nitrate use, smoking, social deprivation score systolic blood pressure, triglycerides, |
|
| USA | NHANES III | 1988–1994 | 10,245 | 13.2 | Mean age presented by risk group(35+) | 4873 (48%) | 5372 (52%) | Creatinine μg/g (-) CRP (mg/dL) (-) Fibrinogen (mg/dl) (-) Cystatin C (mg/dl) (-) Uric acid (mg/dl) (-) 25(OH)D (ng/mL) (-) Homocysteine (umol/l) (-) | All-cause Cancer CVD | Age, blood pressure, cholesterol, diabetes, high- and low-density lipoprotein, smoking and triglycerides |
- = data not available
Fig 2Forest plot of Hazard ratios for all-cause, cancer, CHD-related, and CVD-related mortality for each 1-SD increase in CRP.
Fig 3Forest plot of Hazard ratios for all-cause, CHD-related, CVD-related, and Non-CVD-related mortality for each 1-SD increase in NT proBNP.
Fig 4Forest plot of Hazard ratios for all-cause mortality risk for each 1-SD increase in IL-6.
Fig 5Forest plot of Hazard ratios for all-cause mortality risk and increases in white blood cell count.
A brief explanation of the role of each biomarker.
| Biomarker | Role |
|---|---|
|
| Major circulating metabolite of vitamin D used as a biomarker of vitamin D status [ |
|
| Brain Natriuretic Peptide (BNP) is a cardiac hormone predictive of cardiovascular events which is secreted from cardiomyocytes together with N-Terminal pro-Brain Natriuretic Peptide (NTproBNP) which is biologically inactive but has a longer half-life [ |
|
| Albumin is associated with inflammation [ |
|
| Intercellular Adhesion Molecule-1 (ICAM-1), P-selectin and CD40-ligand are all markers of intercellular adhesion [ |
|
| Total Cholesterol (TC), High Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol (HDL-C) and Low Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol (LDL-C) are atherogenic and can reflect risk of cardiovascular disease [ |
|
| Cystatin C is a marker of glomerular filtration rate and predictive of risk of cardiovascular events [ |
|
| Interleukin 1b (IL-1b), Interleukin 4 Soluble Receptor (IL-4sr), Interleukin 8, (IL-8), Interleukin 10 (IL-10), Interleukin 12 (IL-12) and Tumour Necrosis Factor Alpha (TNFa) are cytokines which are markers of inflammatory response [ |
|
| Metalloproteinase 9 (MMP-9) is a marker of extra cellular matrix regulation [ |
|
| Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate (ESR) is used as a marker of inflammation [ |
|
| Alpha 1-acid Glycoprotein (AAG) is an acute phase inflammatory marker [ |
|
| Homocysteine is associated with kidney function [ |
|
| Cortisol is an immunosuppressant produced by the hypothalamic-pituitary axis [ |
|
| C-Reactive Proteins (CRP) is an acute-phase protein produced in response to inflammation [ |
|
| Creatinine is used as a marker of renal function and is associated with risk of cardiovascular events [ |
|
| PIIINP is a marker of collagen turnover [ |
|
| Granulocytes, Monocytes, Lymphocytes and Neutrophils are white cells involved in immune response [ |