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Aging clocks

iAge (immune age clock)

DEiAge (Immunalteruhr)

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iAge is an inflammatory-age metric introduced by Sayed and colleagues (2021, Stanford) that uses a deep-learning model trained on a panel of 50 circulating cytokines and chemokines from 1,001 healthy individuals across the decade-long Stanford 1000 Immunomes Project. The model compresses the immunome profile into a single inflammatory-age score that predicts cardiovascular risk, multimorbidity, and all-cause mortality independently of chronological age. CXCL9—a chemokine associated with T-cell recruitment and endothelial dysfunction—was identified as the single most informative driver. The clock highlights the immune system as a distinct, targetable dimension of biological ageing.

Sources

  1. Sayed N, Huang Y, Nguyen K, Krejciova-Rajaniemi Z, Grawe AP, Gao T, Tibshirani R, Hastie T, Bhatt A, Iha H, Contrepois K, Ellenberger M, Soberanes D, Janssen WJ, Guttman-Jasper T, Jonasson I, Patel RA, Dhingra R, Bhatt DL, Bhatt P, Bhatt DL, Snyder MP, Furman D. (2021). An inflammatory aging clock (iAge) based on deep learning tracks multimorbidity, immunosenescence, frailty and cardiovascular aging. *Nature Aging*doi:10.1038/s43587-021-00082-y