LEXINGTON, Ky., June 28,
2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Marking a milestone
development in epigenetic research and clinical health
applications, laboratory TruDiagnostic is launching the first ever,
epigenetic aging analysis of individual organ systems, using
validated and system-specific trained clocks. These algorithms,
developed by scientists at Yale
University, were previously released in biology journal
bioRxiv as a preprint, with peer reviewed publications expected
later this year.
Now known as SYMPHONYAge (System Methylation Proxy of
Heterogeneous Organ Years), this collection of system-specific
clocks provides a new way of looking at aging by examining how
different parts of the body decline independently, and
synchronously, over time. Due to lifestyle and dietary choices,
researchers explain that organ systems age differently in a single
body, and that disease-related risks can be calculated by examining
11 major systems and their biological effect on one another. This
includes: Lung Age, Heart Age, Brain
Age, Hormone Age, Metabolic Age, Musculoskeletal Age, Blood
Age, Liver Age, Inflammation Age, Kidney Age, and Immune System
Age.
While some biological age tests already claim to predict the
extent of aging of various organ systems, SYMPHONYAge is notably
different in scope, validation, and associations with various
health outcomes. It is also the only published clock which gives
organ specific aging information. TruDiagnostic has an exclusive
license on the use of these algorithms which were previously called
Systems Clock during earlier stages of research and
development.
Researchers explain that SYMPHONYAge differs from its
early-stage predecessors in the following ways.
- More clocks: SYMPHONYAge reports on 11 (opposed to nine)
organ systems, using system-specific clocks. Additionally, it also
predicts one integrated whole-body clock that uses the 11
system-specific clocks as input.
- More training data: SYMPHONYAge uses 133 molecular, cellular,
and functional biomarkers for modeling organ system ages, while old
organ clocks only used 59 biomarkers. The additional biomarkers
were selected based on clinical knowledge from physician Dr.
Albert Higgins-Chen. Additionally,
the new SYMPHONYAge clock uses 125K
methylation sites, while previous organ clocks used only
78K methylation sites.
- More validation: SYMPHONYAge organ clocks have been validated
to be superior to presently available clocks when evaluating 16
different health outcomes across 5,129 samples (three different
datasets). Validation is set to be published, but is currently
online and under review, by bioRxiv. The old organ age clock
(Systems Age) has shown to only be comparable to four different
outcomes in just 2,167 samples (1 dataset only), in unpublished
data.
- More insights: The new SYMPHONYAge clocks have been used to
find aging subtypes with unique health risks, while this has not
been done with older, system-specific clocks. Additionally,
validation shows SYMPHONYAge clocks are specifically associated
with health outcomes related to their physiological system (ex.
Lung clock predicts future lung cancer, Heart clock predicts future
coronary heart disease, and Blood clock predicts future
leukemia).
Scientists from Yale University and
TruDiagnostic stress that our body's systems do not age in
isolation, and thus age-related disease and functional decline
often do not occur in isolation either. "Many age-related illnesses
stem from issues in various biological systems working together.
For instance, arthritis is the result of both musculoskeletal wear
and inflammation, whereas stroke can happen due to problems in the
cardiovascular system, metabolism, inflammation, and brain
function," explains Yale researcher Dr.
Albert Higgins Chen. These
interconnected patterns can lead to different aging types, making
some people more prone to certain age-related diseases.
Understanding these patterns helps in forecasting health
outcomes.
For more information on accessing SYMPHONYAge insights and the
science behind its development, click here OR contact
support@trudiagnostic.com.
About TruDiagnostic
Home to the largest, private DNA methylation database in the world,
TruDiagnostic is a leading health data company and CLIA-certified
laboratory that specializes in epigenetic testing and research. In
partnership with notable biotech developers, researchers, and
academic institutions, TruDiagnostic is transforming the healthcare
potential of epigenetic data into actionable applications. With the
ability to analyze more than 1,000,000 locations on one's DNA,
TruDiagnostic's research and patient testing provides the most
in-depth epigenetic results, and multi-omic correlations to health.
For additional information regarding TruDiagnostic and the services
it provides, please visit the company website
at https://trudiagnostic.com/
Hannah Went, Director of
Operations
(937) 570-0471
hannah@trudiagnostic.com
www.trudiagnostic.com
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SOURCE TruDiagnostic