Current Gerontology and Geriatrics Research (Jan 2010)

Predicting Successful Aging in a Population-Based Sample of Georgia Centenarians

  • Jonathan Arnold,
  • Jianliang Dai,
  • Lusine Nahapetyan,
  • Ankit Arte,
  • Mary Ann Johnson,
  • Dorothy Hausman,
  • Willard L. Rodgers,
  • Robert Hensley,
  • Peter Martin,
  • Maurice MacDonald,
  • Adam Davey,
  • Ilene C. Siegler,
  • S. Michal Jazwinski,
  • Leonard W. Poon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2010/989315
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2010

Abstract

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Used a population-based sample (Georgia Centenarian Study, GCS), to determine proportions of centenarians reaching 100 years as (1) survivors (43%) of chronic diseases first experienced between 0–80 years of age, (2) delayers (36%) with chronic diseases first experienced between 80–98 years of age, or (3) escapers (17%) with chronic diseases only at 98 years of age or older. Diseases fall into two morbidity profiles of 11 chronic diseases; one including cardiovascular disease, cancer, anemia, and osteoporosis, and another including dementia. Centenarians at risk for cancer in their lifetime tended to be escapers (73%), while those at risk for cardiovascular disease tended to be survivors (24%), delayers (39%), or escapers (32%). Approximately half (43%) of the centenarians did not experience dementia. Psychiatric disorders were positively associated with dementia, but prevalence of depression, anxiety, and psychoses did not differ significantly between centenarians and an octogenarian control group. However, centenarians were higher on the Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS) than octogenarians. Consistent with our model of developmental adaptation in aging, distal life events contribute to predicting survivorship outcome in which health status as survivor, delayer, or escaper appears as adaptation variables late in life.