Sociodemographic patterns in biomarkers of aging in the Add Health cohort

Citation

Momkus, Jennifer; Aiello, Allison E.; Stebbins, Rebecca; Zhang, Yuan; & Harris, Kathleen Mullan (2024). Sociodemographic patterns in biomarkers of aging in the Add Health cohort. Biodemography and Social Biology. pp. 1-18

Abstract

Biomarkers in population health research serve as indicators of incremental physiological deterioration and contribute to our understanding of mechanisms through which social disparities in health unfold over time. Yet, few population-based studies incorporate biomarkers of aging in early midlife, when disease risks may emerge and progress across the life course. We describe the distributions of several biomarkers of inflammation and neurodegeneration and their variation by sociodemographic characteristics using blood samples collected during Wave V of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (ages 33-44 years). Higher mean levels of inflammatory and neurodegenerative biomarkers were associated with greater socioeconomic disadvantage. For example, the neurodegenerative markers, Neurofilament Light Chain and total Tau proteins were higher among lower income groups, though the relationship was not statistically significant. Similarly, proinflammatory marker Tumor Necrosis Factor-α (TNF-α) levels were higher among those with lower education. Significant differences in the mean levels of other proinflammatory markers were observed by race/ethnicity, sex, census region, BMI, and smoking status. These descriptive findings indicate that disparities in biomarkers associated with aging are already evident among young adults in their 30s and attention should focus on age-related disease risk earlier in the life course.

URL

https://doi.org/10.1080/19485565.2024.2334687

Keyword(s)

Aging

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Biodemography and Social Biology

Author(s)

Momkus, Jennifer
Aiello, Allison E.
Stebbins, Rebecca
Zhang, Yuan
Harris, Kathleen Mullan

Year Published

2024

Pages

1-18

Edition

March 29, 2024

ISSN/ISBN

1948-5565

DOI

10.1080/19485565.2024.2334687

Reference ID

10365