# Delineating the trajectories and normative values of multi-systemic aging metrics in the UK, the US, and China

**Authors:** Liming Zhang, Jiening Yu, Xueqing Jia, Jingyun Zhang, Wei Yang, Xi Chen, Emiel O Hoogendijk, Zuyun Liu

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.2667 · Innovation in Aging · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study compares aging patterns across the UK, US, and China, revealing differences in how various body systems decline with age and how these differences relate to socioeconomic factors.

## Contribution

The study provides a comparative analysis of multi-systemic aging trajectories across three countries, highlighting socioeconomic disparities in health outcomes.

## Key findings

- Most organ/system functions deteriorate or remain stable after adulthood, except cognitive function which declines more after age 70 in China and the UK.
- Males and females show differences in cardiovascular and muscle-skeletal aging trajectories.
- Low-income and low-education groups in China show more severe aging-related deterioration in multiple systems.

## Abstract

Aging is a multi-dimensional process and manifests heterogeneities across different organ systems, individuals, and countries. Here we used three large national datasets (UKB, NHANES, and CHARLS) to delineate the trajectories of 14 organ/system-representative aging metrics for persons under different sociodemographic contexts in the UK, the US, and China. The functions of all aging metrics, except for cognitive function, manifested a progressive deterioration or maintained stability after adulthood, especially after middle age. The deterioration of cognitive function was more pronounced after the age of 70 in Chinese and British populations, while not in the American populations. In the stratified analyses, males and females manifested disparities in aging trajectories involving the cardiovascular and muscle-skeletal systems. Notably, we observed substantial disparities in the aging trajectories by economic and educational levels within and between the three countries: the low-income and low-education subgroups in China manifested a more pronounced deterioration in the functioning of multiple systems (i.e., brain, muscle-skeletal, physical function, and pulmonary). However, these income or educational disparities were nonexistent in the UK and the US participants, implying health inequalities caused by regional socioeconomic disparities. This work may serve as a proof-of-concept to comprehend the multi-dimensional signature of systemic aging and call for policies to promote health equity across nations when facing dramatic global aging.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12760927