Dashti Hassan S, Liu Chloe, Deng Hao, Sharma Anushka, Payton Antony, Maharani Asri, Didikoglu Altug
Department of Anesthesia, Critical Care and Pain Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
Division of Sleep Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Commun Med (Lond). 2025 Sep 4;5(1):385. doi: 10.1038/s43856-025-01035-x.
Older adults are vulnerable to mistimed food intake due to health and environmental changes; characterizing meal timing may inform strategies to promote healthy aging. We investigated longitudinal trajectories of self-reported meal timing in older adults and their associations with morbidity, genetic profiles, and all-cause mortality.
We analyzed data from 2945 community-dwelling older adults from the University of Manchester Longitudinal Study of Cognition in Normal Healthy Old Age, with up to five repeated assessments of meal timing and health behaviors conducted between 1983 and 2017. Linear mixed-effects models, latent class analysis, and Cox regression were used to examine relationships between meal timing with illness and behavioral factors, genetic scores for chronotype and obesity, and mortality.
Here we show older age is associated with later breakfast and dinner times, a later eating midpoint, and a shorter daily eating window. Physical and psychological illnesses, including fatigue, oral health problems, depression, anxiety, and multimorbidity, are primarily associated with later breakfast. Genetic profiles related to an evening chronotype, but not obesity, are linked to later meals. Later breakfast timing is also associated with increased mortality. Latent class analysis of meal timing trajectories identify early and late eating groups, with 10-year survival rates of 86.7% in the late eating group compared to 89.5% in the early eating group.
Meal timing, particularly later breakfast, shifts with age and may reflect broader health changes in older adults, with implications for morbidity and longevity.
由于健康和环境变化,老年人容易出现饮食时间不当的情况;描述用餐时间可能为促进健康老龄化的策略提供依据。我们调查了老年人自我报告的用餐时间的纵向轨迹及其与发病率、基因概况和全因死亡率的关联。
我们分析了来自曼彻斯特大学正常健康老年认知纵向研究的2945名社区居住老年人的数据,在1983年至2017年期间对用餐时间和健康行为进行了多达五次重复评估。使用线性混合效应模型、潜在类别分析和Cox回归来检验用餐时间与疾病、行为因素、昼夜节律型和肥胖的基因评分以及死亡率之间的关系。
我们发现,年龄较大与早餐和晚餐时间较晚、进食中点较晚以及每日进食窗口较短有关。身体和心理疾病,包括疲劳、口腔健康问题、抑郁、焦虑和多种疾病,主要与早餐时间较晚有关。与夜间昼夜节律型相关的基因概况,而非肥胖相关的基因概况,与用餐时间较晚有关。早餐时间较晚也与死亡率增加有关。用餐时间轨迹的潜在类别分析确定了早食组和晚食组,晚食组的10年生存率为86.7%,而早食组为89.5%。
用餐时间,尤其是早餐时间较晚,会随着年龄的增长而变化,可能反映了老年人更广泛的健康变化,对发病率和寿命有影响。