Study Links Accelerated Aging To Cancer Risk in Younger Adults - CNN
Study Links Accelerated Aging To Cancer Risk in Younger Adults - CNN
Cancer is "an aging disease" that is "really coming to a younger population," one of the study
authors says. Pramote Polyamate/Moment RF/Getty Images
(CNN) — Researchers looking for clues about why some types of cancer are on
the rise in younger adults say they’ve found an interesting lead: a connection to
accelerated biological aging.
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Aging is the major risk for many types of cancer, meaning the older you get, the
more likely you are to be diagnosed. And increasingly, experts recognize that age
is more than just the number of candles on a birthday cake. It’s also the wear and
tear on the body, caused by lifestyle, stress and genetics, which is sometimes
referred to as a person’s biological age.
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“We all know cancer is an aging disease. However, it is really coming to a younger
population. So whether we can use the well-developed concept of biological
aging to apply that to the younger generation is a really untouched area,” said Dr.
Yin Cao, an associate professor of surgery at the Washington University School of
Medicine in St. Louis and senior author of the new research, which was presented
Sunday at the American Association of Cancer Research’s annual conference in
San Diego.
They homed in on nine blood-based markers that have been shown to correlate
with biological age:
These nine values were then plugged into an algorithm called PhenoAge that was
used to calculate each person’s biological age. The researchers determined
accelerated aging by comparing people’s biological ages with their chronological
ages.
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They then checked cancer registries to see how many in the group had been
diagnosed with early cancers, which the researchers defined as cancers
appearing before age 55. There were nearly such 3,200 cancers diagnosed.
The researchers found that people born in 1965 or later were 17% more likely to
show accelerated aging than those born from 1950 through 1954.
Compared with people who had the smallest amount of faster aging in the
biobank sample, those who scored highest had twice the risk of early-onset lung
cancer, more than 60% higher risk of a gastrointestinal tumor and more than 80%
higher risk of uterine cancer.
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The study wasn’t designed to answer questions about why these cancer types
seemed to have the strongest ties to accelerated aging, but Ruiyi Tian, the
graduate student who led the research, has some theories.
Tian said it’s possible that lungs are more vulnerable to aging than other types of
tissues because the lung has a limited ability to regenerate. Stomach and
intestinal cancers, she says, have been linked to inflammation, which increases
with aging.
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Cao said the strength of the research is that the researchers saw these signals in
such a large number of people, but she acknowledges that the study has
limitations, too.
For example, people in the study weren’t followed over time. The blood test results
were from a single test, so they gave only a snapshot of risk, which may change.
Ideally, she said, researchers would be able to follow the same group for years,
taking blood samples along the way to get a more accurate trajectory of their risk.
“The ideal scenario is that we would have multiple blood collections throughout
the life course, which is not feasible even in biobanks like UK Biobank,” Cao said.
She said the association should also be tested in more diverse populations, since
the effects of social factors tied to racial discrimination need to be better
illuminated, as well.
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Dr. Anne Blaes, who studies the impact of biological aging in cancer survivors at
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the University of Minnesota, said the study results are exciting because they could
point to a better way to find people who are at higher risk of getting cancer when
they’re young. Right now, young adults who don’t have a family history or other
risk factor aren’t regularly screened for most kind of cancer.
“We’re seeing more and more cancers, especially GI cancers and breast cancers,
in younger individuals. And if we had a way of identifying who’s at higher risk for
those, then really, you can imagine we’d be recommending screening at a
different time,” said Blaes, a professor and director of the Division of Hematology
and Oncology at UM medical school. She was not involved in the new research.
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team.
Blaes said that if you can find people who are at higher risk because their cells
are aging faster, you can target lifestyle interventions too: things like nutrition,
exercise and sleep.
“There are medications that also look like they can slow down accelerated aging,”
said Blaes, who is testing two of them in cancer survivors. Cancer survivors often
show greater biological aging, perhaps because of the after effects of therapies
like chemotherapy and radiation.
The medications belong to a class called senolytics, drugs thought to target and
get rid of damaged and aging cells.
Right now, it’s not clear who might benefit from these drugs, but assessments of
accelerated aging like PhenoAge could one day help point doctors to the people
who most need them.
“It’s super interesting. It’s not quite prime time, where we would go out and
prescribe those medications for people, but this is really, really important work,”
Blaes said.
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