Men
who avoid certain risk factors in Midlife may have longer, healthier
life
Newswise — Avoiding health risk factors in midlife such as smoking,
being overweight, excessive drinking and hypertension is associated
with a longer and healthier life in men, according to a study in the
November 15 issue of JAMA, a theme issue on men's health.
Bradley J. Willcox, M.D., of the Pacific Health Research Institute
and Kuakini Medical Center in Honolulu, presented the findings of
the study today at a JAMA media briefing on men's health in New
York.
Persons alive at age 85 years or older are the
fastest-growing age group in most industrialized countries
and are among the largest consumers of health care
resources.
Identifying strategies for remaining healthy, vigorous, and
disability-free at older ages has become a major priority, according
to background information in the article. Studies with substantial
numbers of long-lived participants and characteristics associated
with longer survival are rare but essential to identify risk factors
for health and survival at older ages.
Dr. Willcox and colleagues examined potential biological, lifestyle,
and sociodemographic risk factors present at middle-age to identify
risk factors for healthy survival.
The study included 5,820 Japanese-American middle-aged men (average
age, 54) in the Kuakini Honolulu Heart Program/Honolulu Asia Aging
Study. The participants were free of illness and functional
impairments and were followed for up to 40 years (1965-2005) to
assess overall and exceptional survival.
Exceptional survival was defined as survival to a specified age (75,
80, 85, or 90 years) without incidence of 6 major chronic diseases
and without physical and cognitive impairment.
The diseases were coronary heart disease, stroke, cancer (excluding
nonmelanoma skin cancer), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease,
Parkinson disease, and treated diabetes. Of the 5,820 original
participants, 2,451 participants (42 percent) survived to age 85
years and 655 participants (11 percent) met the criteria for
exceptional survival to age 85 years.
The researchers found that high grip strength and avoidance of
overweight, hyperglycemia, hypertension, smoking, and excessive
alcohol consumption were associated with both overall and
exceptional survival. In addition, high education and avoidance of
hypertriglyceridemia (elevated triglyceride level) were associated
with exceptional survival, and lack of a marital partner was
associated with death before age 85 years.
Risk factor models based on cumulative risk factors (survival risk
score) suggest that the probability of survival to age 85 years is
as high as 69 percent with no risk factors and as low as 22 percent
with 6 or more risk factors. The probability of exceptional
(healthy) survival to age 85 years was 55 percent with no risk
factors but decreased to 9 percent with 6 or more risk factors.
"Anthropometric [measurement and study of the human body and its
capacities] measures from this study, such as grip strength, suggest
that it is important to be physically robust in midlife. This is
consistent with theories of aging that suggest that better-built
organisms last longer and that physiological reserve is an important
determinant of survival," the authors write. This may also be a
marker of physical fitness.
"In summary, we have identified several potentially important risk
factors for healthy survival in a large group of middle-aged men.
These risk factors can be easily measured in clinical settings and
are, for the most part, modifiable. This study suggests that common
approaches that target multiple risk factors simultaneously, such as
avoidance of smoking or hypertension, and approaches that enhance
insulin sensitivity, such as maintaining a lean body weight, may
improve the probability of better health at older ages. This may be
especially important for men, few of whom survive to oldest-old
age," the researchers conclude.