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Associations of cardiovascular biomarkers and plasma albumin with exceptional survival to the highest ages.

Takumi HirataYasumichi AraiShinsuke YuasaYukiko AbeMichiyo TakayamaTakashi SasakiAkira KunitomiHiroki InagakiMotoyoshi EndoJun MorinagaKimio YoshimuraTetsuo AdachiYuichi OikeToru TakebayashiHideyuki OkanoNobuyoshi Hirose
Published in: Nature communications (2020)
Supercentenarians (those aged ≥110 years) are approaching the current human longevity limit by preventing or surviving major illness. Identifying specific biomarkers conducive to exceptional survival might provide insights into counter-regulatory mechanisms against aging-related disease. Here, we report associations between cardiovascular disease-related biomarkers and survival to the highest ages using a unique dataset of 1,427 oldest individuals from three longitudinal cohort studies, including 36 supercentenarians, 572 semi-supercentenarians (105-109 years), 288 centenarians (100-104 years), and 531 very old people (85-99 years). During follow-up, 1,000 participants (70.1%) died. Overall, N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP), interleukin-6, cystatin C and cholinesterase are associated with all-cause mortality independent of traditional cardiovascular risk factors and plasma albumin. Of these, low NT-proBNP levels are statistically associated with a survival advantage to supercentenarian age. Only low albumin is associated with high mortality across age groups. These findings expand our knowledge on the biology of human longevity.
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