A Frailty-Based Plasma Proteomic Signature Capturing Overall Health and Well-Being in Older Adults
Fangyu Liu, Sanish Sathyan, Toshiko Tanaka, Nir Barzilai, Sofiya Milman, Keenan Walker, Joe Verghese

TL;DR
This study identifies a blood-based protein signature that predicts frailty and overall health in older adults, offering a new tool for assessing age-related health risks.
Contribution
A novel 25-protein blood-based frailty index was developed and validated across multiple cohorts.
Findings
The 25-protein signature (pFI) strongly correlates with frailty and health outcomes in three independent cohorts.
The pFI is associated with age-related conditions, functional measures, and increased risk of mortality and dementia.
The pFI captures overall well-being and health beyond traditional frailty measures.
Abstract
Frailty is an age-related syndrome characterized by an increased vulnerability to adverse health outcomes in the face of stressors. By deriving a blood-based proteomic signature for frailty, the current study aimed to enhance the understanding of frailty biology and derive a person-specific predictor for risk of frailty and other adverse age-related health outcomes. Penalized regression method was used to derive a 25-proteins signature (proteomic frailty index [pFI]) predictive of the cumulative frailty index (FI) in a training set of participants from the LonGenity cohort (N = 440). The pFI was validated with measured FI at baseline (r = 0.58) in the validation set (N = 440) from the same cohort and in two other independent cohorts: the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study (N = 5195, r = 0.61, p < 0.001) and the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging (BLSA, N = 654, r =…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFrailty in Older Adults · Nutrition and Health in Aging · Telomeres, Telomerase, and Senescence
