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Development and Validation of the Healthy Longevity Index for Personalized Healthy Aging in Primary Care: Cross-National Retrospective Analysis

JMIR Aging. 2025 Nov 3;8:e80034. doi: 10.2196/80034.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Measuring and promoting healthy aging at an individual level remains challenging as promoting healthy longevity requires real-time, personalized tools to assess risk and guide interventions in clinical practice.

OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to develop and validate a novel Healthy Longevity Index (HLI) for use in primary care settings in older adults.

METHODS: Using data from the Taiwan Longitudinal Study on Aging (TLSA; n=4470), we developed a nomogram-based HLI incorporating demographics, lifestyle factors, intrinsic capacity (IC) measures, and chronic conditions to predict 4-, 8-, and 12-year disability- and dementia-free survival (absence of physical disability, dementia, or mortality). The HLI was internally validated in a TLSA subset and externally validated in the Japanese National Institute for Longevity Sciences, Longitudinal Study of Aging (NILS-LSA) cohort (n=1090).

RESULTS: The 12-year HLI nomogram demonstrated robust performance, with C-statistics of 0.79 (bootstrapped 95% CI 0.78-0.80) in the TLSA training cohort and 0.77 (bootstrapped 95% CI 0.75-0.79) in the TLSA validation cohort. External validation in the NILS-LSA yielded a C-statistic of 0.71 (bootstrapped 95% CI 0.66-0.76). The HLI effectively stratified participants into risk tertiles, with the highest-risk group showing only 27.8% probability of 12-year disability- and dementia-free survival compared to 87.8% in the lowest-risk group. Key predictors included age, sex, education, and, particularly, IC impairments in locomotion, visual acuity, and cognition-all assessable during routine primary care consultations.

CONCLUSIONS: The HLI provides a practical tool for real-time, personalized assessment of healthy longevity risk in primary care settings. Its design enables providers to deliver person-centered care through targeted interventions and individualized prevention strategies that promote healthy aging across populations, especially in older adults.

PMID:41183329 | DOI:10.2196/80034

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