Discovering markers of healthy aging: a prospective study in a Danish male birth cohort

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Discovering markers of healthy aging : a prospective study in a Danish male birth cohort. / Zarnani, Kiyana; Nichols, Thomas E; Alfaro-Almagro, Fidel; Fagerlund, Birgitte; Lauritzen, Martin; Rostrup, Egill; Smith, Stephen M.

In: Aging, Vol. 11, No. 16, 2019, p. 5943-5974.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Zarnani, K, Nichols, TE, Alfaro-Almagro, F, Fagerlund, B, Lauritzen, M, Rostrup, E & Smith, SM 2019, 'Discovering markers of healthy aging: a prospective study in a Danish male birth cohort', Aging, vol. 11, no. 16, pp. 5943-5974. https://doi.org/10.18632/aging.102151

APA

Zarnani, K., Nichols, T. E., Alfaro-Almagro, F., Fagerlund, B., Lauritzen, M., Rostrup, E., & Smith, S. M. (2019). Discovering markers of healthy aging: a prospective study in a Danish male birth cohort. Aging, 11(16), 5943-5974. https://doi.org/10.18632/aging.102151

Vancouver

Zarnani K, Nichols TE, Alfaro-Almagro F, Fagerlund B, Lauritzen M, Rostrup E et al. Discovering markers of healthy aging: a prospective study in a Danish male birth cohort. Aging. 2019;11(16):5943-5974. https://doi.org/10.18632/aging.102151

Author

Zarnani, Kiyana ; Nichols, Thomas E ; Alfaro-Almagro, Fidel ; Fagerlund, Birgitte ; Lauritzen, Martin ; Rostrup, Egill ; Smith, Stephen M. / Discovering markers of healthy aging : a prospective study in a Danish male birth cohort. In: Aging. 2019 ; Vol. 11, No. 16. pp. 5943-5974.

Bibtex

@article{54fd5971ca72433ea72dae4fd5cc2585,
title = "Discovering markers of healthy aging: a prospective study in a Danish male birth cohort",
abstract = "There is a pressing need to identify markers of cognitive and neural decline in healthy late-midlife participants. We explored the relationship between cross-sectional structural brain-imaging derived phenotypes (IDPs) and cognitive ability, demographic, health and lifestyle factors (non-IDPs). Participants were recruited from the 1953 Danish Male Birth Cohort (N=193). Applying an extreme group design, members were selected in 2 groups based on cognitive change between IQ at age ~20y (IQ-20) and age ~57y (IQ-57). Subjects showing the highest (n=95) and lowest (n=98) change were selected (at age ~57) for assessments on multiple IDPs and non-IDPs. We investigated the relationship between 453 IDPs and 70 non-IDPs through pairwise correlation and multivariate canonical correlation analysis (CCA) models. Significant pairwise associations included positive associations between IQ-20 and gray-matter volume of the temporal pole. CCA identified a richer pattern - a single {"}positive-negative{"} mode of population co-variation coupling individual cross-subject variations in IDPs to an extensive range of non-IDP measures (r = 0.75, Pcorrected < 0.01). Specifically, this mode linked higher cognitive performance, positive early-life social factors, and mental health to a larger brain volume of several brain structures, overall volume, and microstructural properties of some white matter tracts. Interestingly, both statistical models identified IQ-20 and gray-matter volume of the temporal pole as important contributors to the inter-individual variation observed. The converging patterns provide novel insight into the importance of early adulthood intelligence as a significant marker of late-midlife neural decline and motivates additional study.",
author = "Kiyana Zarnani and Nichols, {Thomas E} and Fidel Alfaro-Almagro and Birgitte Fagerlund and Martin Lauritzen and Egill Rostrup and Smith, {Stephen M}",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.18632/aging.102151",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
pages = "5943--5974",
journal = "Aging",
issn = "1945-4589",
publisher = "Impact Journals LLC",
number = "16",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Discovering markers of healthy aging

T2 - a prospective study in a Danish male birth cohort

AU - Zarnani, Kiyana

AU - Nichols, Thomas E

AU - Alfaro-Almagro, Fidel

AU - Fagerlund, Birgitte

AU - Lauritzen, Martin

AU - Rostrup, Egill

AU - Smith, Stephen M

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - There is a pressing need to identify markers of cognitive and neural decline in healthy late-midlife participants. We explored the relationship between cross-sectional structural brain-imaging derived phenotypes (IDPs) and cognitive ability, demographic, health and lifestyle factors (non-IDPs). Participants were recruited from the 1953 Danish Male Birth Cohort (N=193). Applying an extreme group design, members were selected in 2 groups based on cognitive change between IQ at age ~20y (IQ-20) and age ~57y (IQ-57). Subjects showing the highest (n=95) and lowest (n=98) change were selected (at age ~57) for assessments on multiple IDPs and non-IDPs. We investigated the relationship between 453 IDPs and 70 non-IDPs through pairwise correlation and multivariate canonical correlation analysis (CCA) models. Significant pairwise associations included positive associations between IQ-20 and gray-matter volume of the temporal pole. CCA identified a richer pattern - a single "positive-negative" mode of population co-variation coupling individual cross-subject variations in IDPs to an extensive range of non-IDP measures (r = 0.75, Pcorrected < 0.01). Specifically, this mode linked higher cognitive performance, positive early-life social factors, and mental health to a larger brain volume of several brain structures, overall volume, and microstructural properties of some white matter tracts. Interestingly, both statistical models identified IQ-20 and gray-matter volume of the temporal pole as important contributors to the inter-individual variation observed. The converging patterns provide novel insight into the importance of early adulthood intelligence as a significant marker of late-midlife neural decline and motivates additional study.

AB - There is a pressing need to identify markers of cognitive and neural decline in healthy late-midlife participants. We explored the relationship between cross-sectional structural brain-imaging derived phenotypes (IDPs) and cognitive ability, demographic, health and lifestyle factors (non-IDPs). Participants were recruited from the 1953 Danish Male Birth Cohort (N=193). Applying an extreme group design, members were selected in 2 groups based on cognitive change between IQ at age ~20y (IQ-20) and age ~57y (IQ-57). Subjects showing the highest (n=95) and lowest (n=98) change were selected (at age ~57) for assessments on multiple IDPs and non-IDPs. We investigated the relationship between 453 IDPs and 70 non-IDPs through pairwise correlation and multivariate canonical correlation analysis (CCA) models. Significant pairwise associations included positive associations between IQ-20 and gray-matter volume of the temporal pole. CCA identified a richer pattern - a single "positive-negative" mode of population co-variation coupling individual cross-subject variations in IDPs to an extensive range of non-IDP measures (r = 0.75, Pcorrected < 0.01). Specifically, this mode linked higher cognitive performance, positive early-life social factors, and mental health to a larger brain volume of several brain structures, overall volume, and microstructural properties of some white matter tracts. Interestingly, both statistical models identified IQ-20 and gray-matter volume of the temporal pole as important contributors to the inter-individual variation observed. The converging patterns provide novel insight into the importance of early adulthood intelligence as a significant marker of late-midlife neural decline and motivates additional study.

U2 - 10.18632/aging.102151

DO - 10.18632/aging.102151

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 31480020

VL - 11

SP - 5943

EP - 5974

JO - Aging

JF - Aging

SN - 1945-4589

IS - 16

ER -

ID: 227420899