Life-course Psychosocial Adversity and Biological Aging in the Hispanic Community Health Study / Study of Latinos: A Life-course Model Analysis

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Abstract

Psychosocial adversity over the life course may impact the aging process. However, life-course models have yet to fully explain the biological embedding of psychosocial adversity in aging. A subsample of participants from the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos with DNA methylation (DNAm) data (N = 970) was used to evaluate the effect of adversity on biological aging and the most compatible life-course model. Epigenetic age was estimated from GrimAge and DunedinPACE. We modified a current Bayesian life-course model to estimate the effect of adversity from childhood to adulthood on epigenetic age acceleration and the weights contributed by childhood (\(\:{W}_{childhood}\)) and adulthood (\(\:{W}_{adulthood}\)), which sum to one. The model was also used to evaluate the compatibility with the sensitive period (\(\:{W}_{childhood}\) ≠ \(\:{W}_{adulthood}\)) and accumulation models (\(\:{W}_{childhood}\:\)≈ \(\:{W}_{adulthood}\)). Causal mediation analysis assessed the pathway model by estimating the indirect effect of childhood adversity through adulthood adversity. Per-unit increase in adversity was associated with 0.91 years (95% credible interval [CrI]: 0.28, 1.53; \(\:{W}_{adulthood}\) = 82%, 95% CrI: 36%, 99%) increased GrimAge acceleration (AgeAccelGrim) and 0.013 years/calendar year (95% CrI: -0.005, 0.032; \(\:{W}_{childhood}\) = 49%, 95% CrI: 3%, 97%; \(\:{W}_{adulthood}\) = 51%, 95% CrI: 3%, 97%) increased DunedinPACE. A pronounced indirect effect of childhood adversity was found in AgeAccelGrim (0.23 years, 95% CI: 0.09, 0.37) but minimal in DunedinPACE (0.003 years/calendar year, 95% CI: -0.001, 0.006). Psychosocial adversity from childhood to adulthood may affect biological aging, with distinct life-course models explaining its effects on different aging markers.

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