1 / 19

The Continuing Increase in Life Expectancy

Mortality Experts Meeting Staple Inn Hall 3 March 2008 Living Ever Longer? Tom Kirkwood Director, Institute for Ageing and Health Newcastle University. UN estimate 2000. UN estimate 1990. UN estimate 1980.

garth-west
Download Presentation

The Continuing Increase in Life Expectancy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Mortality Experts Meeting Staple Inn Hall 3 March 2008 Living Ever Longer? Tom Kirkwood Director, Institute for Ageing and HealthNewcastle University

  2. UN estimate 2000 UN estimate 1990 UN estimate 1980 Declining early/mid-life mortality Declining later-life mortality The Continuing Increase in Life Expectancy Oeppen & Vaupel Science 2002

  3. The Challenges for Mortality Research • Life is getting longer already – do we understand why? • What is the likelihood of further increases in life span? • What is likely to happen to age-related health, quality of life and capacity for independent living?

  4. Key Questions about Ageing • Why does ageing occur? • Is there a limit to the human life span? • Do longer lives mean more diseases?

  5. 20 40 60 80 Age Progress Through the Stages of Life Then Now

  6. Protected Survival Period of longevity assured by maintenance and repair Wild Age DISPOSABLE SOMA THEORY Kirkwood Nature 1977

  7. Age-related Frailty, Disability, and Disease ANTI-INFLAMM. INFLAMMATION Accumulation of Cellular Defects GOOD LIFESTYLE GOOD FOOD Random Molecular Damage BAD FOOD STRESS ENVIRONMENT The Ageing Process Kirkwood Cell 2005

  8. By decreasing exposure to damage Improved nutrition Healthy lifestyle Supportive environment By enhancing natural mechanisms for protection and repair Enhanced nutrition Novel drugs, stem cell therapies, etc Human Ageing is Malleable

  9. Genes Nutrition Lifestyle Environment Socioeconomic status Attitude Chance These factors and their interactions are being studied in the Newcastle 85+ Study; a 5-year prospective study of biological, clinical and psychosocial factors associated with healthy ageing funded by MRC/BBSRC. Factors Influencing Longevity and Health Span

  10. Genetic Heritability of Human LifespanCournil & Kirkwood Trends in Genetics 2001 Twin Studies • McGue et al (1993) 0.22 • Herskind et al (1996) 0.25 • Ljungquist et al (1998) <0.33 Traditional Family Studies • Philippe (1978) 0-0.24 • Bocquet-Appel & Jakobi (1990) 0.10-0.30 • Mayer (1990) 0.10-0.33 • Gavrilova et al (1998) 0.18-0.58 • Cournil et al (2000) 0.27 Genes account for 25% of what determines longevity

  11. High intakes of vegetables, fruits and cereals. • Moderate to high intake of fish. • Low intake of meat. • Low intake of saturated fatty acids. • High intake of monounsaturated fatty acids (olive oil). • Low to moderate intake of dairy products, principally cheese and yoghurt. • Modest intake of alcohol (mostly wine).

  12. EPIC-elderly Study Protocol 76,707 men and women aged 60+ No CHD, stroke or cancer at enrolment Median follow up 89 months (4047 deaths) Adherence to Mediterranean diet assessed on 10-point scale: 0 (poor)…9 (high) 2 unit increment results in 8% reduction of overall mortality Trichopoulou A et al. (2005) BMJ330, 991-997

  13. For many important diseases, age is the largest single ‘risk factor’. Understanding why aged cells and organs are more vulnerable to pathology will open new paths to prevention and cure. At present, we have many medical research institutes but very few of these include research on the science of intrinsic ageing. Do longer lives mean more diseases? The coming decades are likely to see greatly expanded research on the mechanisms underpinning both normal ageing and age-related diseases.

  14. Disease B Disease A Disease C ‘Upstream’ ‘Downstream’ Pathways to Age-Related Disease

  15. Targeting for Healthy Ageing Target Population for Nutrition/Lifestyle Future Now Target Population for Drugs, etc Population numbers Unhealthy condition Healthy Adapted from: Green and van der Ouderaa Nature Pharmacogenomics 2003

  16. Beating the Biological Clock • ‘Wrong’ lifestyle • Excess calorie intake • High saturated fats • Low micro-nutrients • Too little exercise • Poor glucose tolerance • Stress • Smoking Biological Ageing • ‘Right’ lifestyle • Energy balance • Maintain glucose sensitivity • Low saturated fats • Rich micro-nutrient diet • High exercise level • Low to moderate stress Chronological Ageing

  17. “If I’d known I was going to live this long, I’d have taken better care of myself” US comedian Eubie Blake on his 100th birthday

  18. Today and Beyond Understanding the future of mortality patterns calls for an multi-disciplinary approaches. Other disciplines have much to learn from the actuarial profession, and vice versa. How to take forward the building of further bridges?

More Related