Bio-psycho-social factors' associations with brain age: a large-scale UK Biobank diffusion study of 35,749 participants.

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Version: Final published version
License: CC BY 4.0
Serval ID
serval:BIB_A01CDC63A313
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Bio-psycho-social factors' associations with brain age: a large-scale UK Biobank diffusion study of 35,749 participants.
Journal
Frontiers in psychology
Author(s)
Korbmacher M., Gurholt T.P., de Lange A.G., van der Meer D., Beck D., Eikefjord E., Lundervold A., Andreassen O.A., Westlye L.T., Maximov I.I.
ISSN
1664-1078 (Print)
ISSN-L
1664-1078
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2023
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
14
Pages
1117732
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: epublish
Abstract
Brain age refers to age predicted by brain features. Brain age has previously been associated with various health and disease outcomes and suggested as a potential biomarker of general health. Few previous studies have systematically assessed brain age variability derived from single and multi-shell diffusion magnetic resonance imaging data. Here, we present multivariate models of brain age derived from various diffusion approaches and how they relate to bio-psycho-social variables within the domains of sociodemographic, cognitive, life-satisfaction, as well as health and lifestyle factors in midlife to old age (N = 35,749, 44.6-82.8 years of age). Bio-psycho-social factors could uniquely explain a small proportion of the brain age variance, in a similar pattern across diffusion approaches: cognitive scores, life satisfaction, health and lifestyle factors adding to the variance explained, but not socio-demographics. Consistent brain age associations across models were found for waist-to-hip ratio, diabetes, hypertension, smoking, matrix puzzles solving, and job and health satisfaction and perception. Furthermore, we found large variability in sex and ethnicity group differences in brain age. Our results show that brain age cannot be sufficiently explained by bio-psycho-social variables alone. However, the observed associations suggest to adjust for sex, ethnicity, cognitive factors, as well as health and lifestyle factors, and to observe bio-psycho-social factor interactions' influence on brain age in future studies.
Keywords
age prediction, brain age, brain variability, cognition, diffusion MRI, health, magnetic resonance imaging
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
29/06/2023 14:58
Last modification date
23/01/2024 8:31
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