Center for the Study of Aging and Human Development, Medical School of Duke University, Durham, NC, USA; Center for Healthy Aging and Development Studies, National School of Development, Raissun Institute for Advanced Studies, Peking University, Beijing, China.
Department of Sociology, Centre for Family and Population Research, National University of Singapore, Singapore.
Lancet. 2017 Apr 22;389(10079):1619-1629. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(17)30548-2. Epub 2017 Mar 10.
The oldest-old (those aged ≥80 years) are the most rapidly growing age group globally, and are most in need of health care and assistance. We aimed to assess changes in mortality, disability in activities of daily living, and physical and cognitive functioning among oldest-old individuals between 1998 and 2008.
We used data from the Chinese Longitudinal Healthy Longevity Study. Three pairs of cohorts aged 80-89 years, 90-99 years, and 100-105 years (in total, 19 528 oldest-old participants) were examined; the two cohorts in each pair were born 10 years apart, with the same age at the time of the assessment in the 1998 and 2008 surveys. Four health outcomes were investigated: annual death rate, Activities of Daily Living (ADL), physical performance in three tests and cognitive function measured by Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE). We used different tests and multivariate regression analyses to examine the cohort differences.
Controlling for various confounding factors, we noted that annual mortality among oldest-old individuals was substantially reduced between 0·2% and 1·3% in 1998-2008 compared with individuals of the same age born 10 years previously, and that disability according to activities of daily living had significantly reduced annually between 0·8% and 2·8%. However, cognitive impairment in the later cohorts increased annually between 0·7% and 2·2% and objective physical performance capacity (standing up from a chair, picking up a book from the floor, and turning around 360°) decreased anually between 0·4% and 3·8%. We also noted that female mortality was substantially lower than male mortality among the oldest-old, but that women's functional capacities in activities of daily living, cognition, and physical performance were worse than their male counterparts.
Advances in medications, lifestyle, and socioeconomics might compress activities of daily living disability, that is, benefits of success, but lifespan extension might expand disability of physical and cognitive functioning as more frail, elderly individuals survive with health problems, that is, costs of success.
National Natural Science Foundation of China, National Institute on Aging/National Institutes of Health, United Nations Funds for Population Activities.
全球最年长的老年人(80 岁及以上)是增长最快的年龄群体,他们最需要医疗保健和帮助。我们旨在评估 1998 年至 2008 年间最年长的老年人的死亡率、日常生活活动中的残疾以及身体和认知功能的变化。
我们使用了来自中国长寿纵向研究的数据。共有 19528 名最年长的老年人参加了三组年龄在 80-89 岁、90-99 岁和 100-105 岁的队列(总共 19528 名最年长的老年人);每对中的两个队列相隔 10 年出生,在 1998 年和 2008 年的调查中年龄相同。我们调查了四个健康结果:年死亡率、日常生活活动(ADL)、三项测试中的身体表现和通过 Mini-Mental State Examination(MMSE)测量的认知功能。我们使用不同的测试和多变量回归分析来检查队列差异。
控制各种混杂因素后,我们注意到最年长的老年人的年死亡率与 10 年前出生的相同年龄的人相比,在 1998-2008 年间大幅降低了 0.2%至 1.3%,而根据日常生活活动的残疾程度也每年显著降低了 0.8%至 2.8%。然而,后期队列的认知障碍每年增加 0.7%至 2.2%,客观的身体活动能力(从椅子上站起来、从地板上捡起一本书、转身 360°)每年降低 0.4%至 3.8%。我们还注意到,在最年长的老年人中,女性死亡率明显低于男性,但女性的日常生活活动、认知和身体表现能力比男性差。
药物、生活方式和社会经济学的进步可能会压缩日常生活活动的残疾程度,即成功的好处,但寿命的延长可能会扩大身体和认知功能的残疾程度,因为更多体弱多病的老年人在有健康问题的情况下生存,即成功的代价。
中国国家自然科学基金、美国国立卫生研究院国家老龄化研究所/美国国立卫生研究院、联合国人口活动基金。