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Biological Age, Chronological Age, and Survival in Pulmonary Fibrosis: A Causal Mediation Analysis.

Janelle Vu PugashettiJohn S KimSwaraj BoseAyodeji AdegunsoyeAngela L LinderholmChing-Hsien ChenMary E StrekKevin R FlahertySusan MurrayChad A NewtonShehabaldin AlqalyoobiShwu-Fan MaJosyf C MychaleckyjRussell P BowlerMeiLan K HanJeffrey L CurtisFernando J MartinezJennifer A SmithImre NothJustin M Oldham
Published in: American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine (2024)
Rationale: Accelerated biological aging has been implicated in the development of interstitial lung disease (ILD) and other diseases of aging but remains poorly understood. Objectives: To identify plasma proteins that mediate the relationship between chronological age and survival association in patients with ILD. Methods: Causal mediation analysis was performed to identify plasma proteins that mediated the chronological age-survival relationship in an idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis discovery cohort. Proteins mediating this relationship after adjustment for false discovery were advanced for testing in an independent ILD validation cohort and explored in a chronic obstructive pulmonary disease cohort. A proteomic-based measure of biological age was constructed and survival analysis performed, assessing the impact of biological age and peripheral blood telomere length on the chronological age-survival relationship. Measurements and Main Results: Twenty-two proteins mediated the chronological age-survival relationship after adjustment for false discovery in the idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis discovery cohort ( n  = 874), with 19 remaining significant mediators of this relationship in the ILD validation cohort ( n  = 983) and one mediating this relationship in the chronic obstructive pulmonary disease cohort. Latent transforming growth factor-β binding protein 2 and ectodysplasin A2 receptor showed the strongest mediation across cohorts. A proteomic measure of biological age completely attenuated the chronological age-survival association and better discriminated survival than chronological age. Results were robust to adjustment for peripheral blood telomere length, which did not mediate the chronological age-survival relationship. Conclusions: Molecular measures of aging completely mediate the relationship between chronological age and survival, suggesting that chronological age has no direct effect on ILD survival.
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