Scientists say they have developed a way of testing how well, or badly,
your body is ageing.
They say it could help predict when a
person will die, identify those at high-risk of dementia and could affect
medicine, pensions and insurance.
The team at King's College London say
looking at "biological age" is more useful than using a date of
birth.
However, the work, published in Genome
Biology, provides no clues as to how to slow the ageing process.
The test looks for an "ageing
signature" in your body's cells by comparing the behaviour of 150 genes.
It was developed by initially comparing
54,000 markers of gene activity in healthy, but largely sedentary, 25 and
65-year-olds and then whittling them down to a final 150.
Prof Jamie Timmons, from King's College
London, told the BBC News website: "There's a healthy ageing signature
that's common to all our tissues, and it appears to be prognostic for a number
of things including longevity and cognitive decline.
"It looks like from the age of 40
onwards you can use this to give guidance on how well an individual is
ageing."
And while some lifestyle decisions, like
spending all day on the sofa, could be bad for your health they do not appear
to affect the speed your body ages.
The team believe combining lifestyle
factors and your biological age would give a more accurate picture of your
health.
Death's door?
The researchers tried the test out on
samples from a group of 70-year-old men in Sweden.
They worked out who was ageing well and who
was ageing very rapidly and were able to predict who would die in the next few
years.
"You could actually pick out people
who had almost no chance of being dead, and you have people who had an almost
45% chance of being dead," said Prof Timmons told the BBC.
There are plans to pilot the test in organ
transplants in the UK to see if people who are technically old, but have a
young "biological age", can still donate organs safely.
The researchers say it could also alter
cancer screening, with people who are ageing rapidly needing to be screened at
a younger age.
He said that it could be used in
conjunction with other checks to identify those at highest risk of developing
the neurodegenerative disease and to enrol them in clinical trials.
"What we really need now are tools to
identify those most at risk in 10, 20 years time and I think that's where this
research will really have an impact," he added.
Worth a pension?
The research group at King's are aware that
being able to check your biological age could have wide-ranging consequences
from pensions to insurance premiums.
Prof Timmons told the BBC: "It raises
a number questions, no doubt, and strenuous debate, but we are judged by our
age already so this might be a smarter way of doing it.
"You might decide not to pay so much
into your pension and enjoy your life as it is now."
Dr Neha Issar-Brown, from the UK's Medical
Research Council, said: "This new test holds great potential as with
further research, it may help improve the development and evaluation of
treatments that prolong good health in older age."
Dr Eric Karran, from the charity
Alzheimer's Research UK, said: "One of the biggest questions in human
biology is how we age, and how this process impacts our wider health and risk
for conditions like Alzheimer's.
"There is much interest in developing
a blood test for diseases like Alzheimer's but such a test would need
rigorously validating to show it was accurate and sensitive before it could be
used in the clinic."
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