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Clarifying the biological and statistical assumptions of cross-sectional biological age predictors: an elaborate illustration using synthetic and real data
by
Goeman, Jelle J.
, Slagboom, P. Eline
, Putter, Hein
, Rodríguez-Girondo, Mar
, Beekman, Marian
, Sluiskes, Marije H.
in
Age
/ Aging
/ Aging clocks
/ Aging divergence
/ Aging rate
/ Biological age
/ Biomarkers
/ Comorbidity
/ Cross-sectional biological age predictors
/ Cross-Sectional Studies
/ DNA methylation
/ Evaluation
/ Health aspects
/ Health Sciences
/ Humans
/ Linear Models
/ Mathematical statistics
/ Medical research
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Medicine, Experimental
/ Mortality
/ Multivariate Analysis
/ Physiology
/ Statistical Theory and Methods
/ Statistics for Life Sciences
/ Theory of Medicine/Bioethics
2024
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Clarifying the biological and statistical assumptions of cross-sectional biological age predictors: an elaborate illustration using synthetic and real data
by
Goeman, Jelle J.
, Slagboom, P. Eline
, Putter, Hein
, Rodríguez-Girondo, Mar
, Beekman, Marian
, Sluiskes, Marije H.
in
Age
/ Aging
/ Aging clocks
/ Aging divergence
/ Aging rate
/ Biological age
/ Biomarkers
/ Comorbidity
/ Cross-sectional biological age predictors
/ Cross-Sectional Studies
/ DNA methylation
/ Evaluation
/ Health aspects
/ Health Sciences
/ Humans
/ Linear Models
/ Mathematical statistics
/ Medical research
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Medicine, Experimental
/ Mortality
/ Multivariate Analysis
/ Physiology
/ Statistical Theory and Methods
/ Statistics for Life Sciences
/ Theory of Medicine/Bioethics
2024
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Clarifying the biological and statistical assumptions of cross-sectional biological age predictors: an elaborate illustration using synthetic and real data
by
Goeman, Jelle J.
, Slagboom, P. Eline
, Putter, Hein
, Rodríguez-Girondo, Mar
, Beekman, Marian
, Sluiskes, Marije H.
in
Age
/ Aging
/ Aging clocks
/ Aging divergence
/ Aging rate
/ Biological age
/ Biomarkers
/ Comorbidity
/ Cross-sectional biological age predictors
/ Cross-Sectional Studies
/ DNA methylation
/ Evaluation
/ Health aspects
/ Health Sciences
/ Humans
/ Linear Models
/ Mathematical statistics
/ Medical research
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Medicine, Experimental
/ Mortality
/ Multivariate Analysis
/ Physiology
/ Statistical Theory and Methods
/ Statistics for Life Sciences
/ Theory of Medicine/Bioethics
2024
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Clarifying the biological and statistical assumptions of cross-sectional biological age predictors: an elaborate illustration using synthetic and real data
Journal Article
Clarifying the biological and statistical assumptions of cross-sectional biological age predictors: an elaborate illustration using synthetic and real data
2024
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Overview
Background
There is divergence in the rate at which people age. The concept of biological age is postulated to capture this variability, and hence to better represent an individual’s true global physiological state than chronological age. Biological age predictors are often generated based on cross-sectional data, using biochemical or molecular markers as predictor variables. It is assumed that the difference between chronological and predicted biological age is informative of one’s chronological age-independent aging divergence ∆.
Methods
We investigated the statistical assumptions underlying the most popular cross-sectional biological age predictors, based on multiple linear regression, the Klemera-Doubal method or principal component analysis. We used synthetic and real data to illustrate the consequences if this assumption does not hold.
Results
The most popular cross-sectional biological age predictors all use the same strong underlying assumption, namely that a candidate marker of aging’s association with chronological age is directly informative of its association with the aging rate ∆. We called this the identical-association assumption and proved that it is untestable in a cross-sectional setting. If this assumption does not hold, weights assigned to candidate markers of aging are uninformative, and no more signal may be captured than if markers would have been assigned weights at random.
Conclusions
Cross-sectional methods for predicting biological age commonly use the untestable identical-association assumption, which previous literature in the field had never explicitly acknowledged. These methods have inherent limitations and may provide uninformative results, highlighting the importance of researchers exercising caution in the development and interpretation of cross-sectional biological age predictors.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
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