Educational Influences on Late-Life Health: Genetic Propensity and Attained Education

Author:

Ericsson Malin12ORCID,Finch Brian3,Karlsson Ida K1ORCID,Gatz Margaret3ORCID,Reynolds Chandra A4ORCID,Pedersen Nancy L1,Mosing Miriam A15

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Karolinska Institutet , Stockholm , Sweden

2. Aging Research Center, Karolinska Institutet & Stockholm University , Stockholm , Sweden

3. Center for Social and Economic Research, University of Southern California , Los Angeles, California , USA

4. Department of Psychology, University of California, Riverside , Riverside, California , USA

5. Department of Cognitive Neuropsychology, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics , Frankurt , Germany

Abstract

Abstract Objectives The educational gradient in late-life health is well established. Despite this, there are still ambiguities concerning the role of underlying confounding by genetic influences and gene-environment (GE) interplay. Here, we investigate the role of educational factors (attained and genetic propensities) on health and mortality in late life using genetic propensity for educational attainment (as measured by a genome-wide polygenic score, PGSEdu) and attained education. Methods By utilizing genetically informative twin data from the Swedish Twin Registry (n = 14,570), we investigated influences of the educational measures, familial confounding as well as the possible presence of passive GE correlation on both objective and subjective indicators of late-life health, that is, the Frailty Index, Multimorbidity, Self-rated health, cardiovascular disease, and all-cause mortality. Results Using between-within models to adjust for shared familial factors, we found that the relationship between educational level and health and mortality later in life persisted despite controlling for familial confounding. PGSEdu and attained education both uniquely predicted late-life health and mortality, even when mutually adjusted. Between-within models of PGSEdu on the health outcomes in dizygotic twins showed weak evidence for passive GE correlation (prGE) in the education-health relationship. Discussion Both genetic propensity to education and attained education are (partly) independently associated with health in late life. These results lend further support for a causal education-health relationship but also raise the importance of genetic contributions and GE interplay.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Swedish Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,Clinical Psychology,Social Psychology

Reference51 articles.

1. Educational attainment influences levels of homozygosity through migration and assortative mating;Abdellaoui,2015

2. Dissecting polygenic signals from genome-wide association studies on human behaviour;Abdellaoui,2021

3. The male-female health-survival paradox: A comparative perspective on sex differences in aging and mortality;Alberts,2014

4. The social stratification of environmental and genetic influences on education: New evidence using a register-based twin sample;Baier,2019

5. Separation of individual-level and cluster-level covariate effects in regression analysis of correlated data;Begg,2003

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