Advanced glycation end products and their ratio to soluble receptor are associated with limitations in physical functioning only in women: results from the CARLA cohort

Author:

Ebert Helen,Lacruz Maria Elena,Kluttig Alexander,Simm Andreas,Greiser Karin Halina,Tiller Daniel,Kartschmit Nadja,Mikolajczyk RafaelORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background Advanced glycation end products (AGEs), modifications of proteins or amino acids, are increasingly produced and accumulated with age-related diseases. Recent studies suggested that the ratio of AGEs and their soluble receptor (sRAGE) is a more accurate biomarker for age-related diseases than each separately. We aim to investigate whether this also applies for physical functioning in a broad age-spectrum. Methods AGE and sRAGE levels, and physical functioning (SF-12 questionnaire) of 967 men and 812 women (45–83 years) were measured in the CARLA study. We used ordinal logistic regression to examine associations between AGEs, sRAGE, and AGE/sRAGE ratio with physical functioning in sex- and age-stratified models. Results Higher levels of AGEs and AGE/sRAGE ratio were associated with lower physical functioning only in women, even after consideration of classical lifestyle and age-related factors (education, BMI, smoking, alcohol consumption, diet, creatinine clearance, diabetes mellitus, lipid lowering and antihypertensive drugs) (odds ratio (OR) =0.86, 95%confidence interval = 0.74–0.98 and OR = 0.86, 95%CI = 0.75–0.98 for AGEs and AGE/sRAGE ratio respectively). We could not demonstrate a significant difference across age. Conclusions We showed a sex-specific association between physical functioning and AGEs and AGE/sRAGE, but no stronger associations of the latter with physical functioning. Further investigation is needed in the pathophysiology of this association.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Wilhelm Roux Program

Federal Employment Office, Saxony Anhalt

personal intramural project funding

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology

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