Association of Torquetenovirus viremia with physical frailty and cognitive impairment in three independent European cohorts

Author:

Giacconi Robertina,Laffon BlancaORCID,Costa Solange,Teixeira-Gomes ArmandaORCID,Maggi Fabrizio,Macera Lisa,Spezia Pietro GiorgioORCID,Piacenza Francesco,Bürkle AlexanderORCID,Moreno-Villanueva Maria,Bonassi Stefano,Valdiglesias VanessaORCID,Teixeira João PauloORCID,Dollé Martijn E.T.ORCID,Rietman M. LisetORCID,Jansen EugèneORCID,Grune Tilman,Gonos Efstathios S.,Franceschi Claudio,Capri MiriamORCID,Weinberger BirgitORCID,Sikora Ewa,Stuetz WolfgangORCID,Toussaint Olivier,Debacq-Chainiaux FlorenceORCID,Hervonen Antti,Hurme Mikko,Slagboom P. Eline,Schön ChristianeORCID,Bernhardt Juergen,Breusing Nicolle,Pásaro EduardoORCID,Maseda AnaORCID,Lorenzo-López LauraORCID,Millán-Calenti José C.ORCID,Provinciali Mauro,Malavolta MarcoORCID

Abstract

Introduction: Immunosenescence and inflammaging have been implicated in the pathophysiology of frailty. Torquetenovirus (TTV), a single-stranded DNA anellovirus, the major component of the human blood virome, shows an increased replication rate with advancing age. An elevated TTV viremia has been associated with an impaired immune function and an increased risk of mortality in the older population. The objective of this study was to analyze the relation between TTV viremia, physical frailty and cognitive impairment Methods: TTV viremia was measured in 1131 nonfrail, 45 physically frail, and 113 cognitively impaired older adults recruited in the MARK-AGE study (overall mean age 64.7±5.9 years), then the results were checked in two other independent cohorts from Spain and Portugal, including 126 frail, 252 prefrail and 141 nonfrail individuals (overall mean age: 77.5±8.3 years). Results: TTV viremia ≥4log was associated with physical frailty (OR: 4.69; 95% CI: 2.06-10.67, p<0.0001) and cognitive impairment (OR: 3.49, 95% CI : 2.14-5.69, p<0.0001) in the MARK-AGE population. The association between TTV DNA load and frailty status was confirmed in the Spanish cohort, while a slight association with cognitive impairment was observed (OR: 1.33; 95% CI: 1.000-1.773), only in the unadjusted model. No association between TTV load and frailty or cognitive impairment was found in the Portuguese sample, although a negative association between TTV viremia and MMSE score was observed in Spanish and Portuguese females. Conclusions: These findings demonstrate an association between TTV viremia and physical frailty, while the association with cognitive impairment was observed only in the younger population from the MARK-AGE study. Further research is necessary to clarify TTV's clinical relevance in the onset and progression of frailty and cognitive decline in older individuals.

Publisher

S. Karger AG

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Aging

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