Healthy lifestyle habits, educational attainment, and the risk of 45 age-related health and mortality outcomes in the UK: A prospective cohort study

Yu Huang, Shuo Wang, Le Tian, Xueli Zhang, Shunming Liu, Zhuoting Zhu, Wei Wang, Danli Shi, Mingguang He (Corresponding Author), Xianwen Shang

Research output: Journal article publicationJournal articleAcademic researchpeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Objectives
This study aimed to evaluate to what extent lifestyle habits, contribute to associations between EA and various conditions, and test the variability in risk reduction for specific health conditions linked to a healthy lifestyle across different EA levels.
Design, setting, participants, and measurements
Data were analyzed from 341,632 UK Biobank participants without baseline cardiovascular disease or cancer (2006–2010). A healthy lifestyle score (0–5) was created by assigning one point for each of five habits: a healthy diet, sufficient physical activity, non-current smoking, moderate alcohol consumption, and low-risk sleep duration. Baseline data on self-reported and genotype-predicted EA were collected, with 45 health outcomes assessed until January 2021. Logistic regression models were used to assess the relationship between EA and lifestyle habits, and associations between the healthy lifestyle score and health/mortality outcomes were examined using Cox proportional hazards model. Moderation analysis tested whether EA modified the associations between a healthy lifestyle and health outcomes, while mediation analysis estimated the proportion of the association between EA and health outcomes explained by lifestyle habits.
Results
Both self-reported and genotype-predicted EA were associated with a healthy diet, non-current smoking, low-risk sleep duration, and moderate alcohol consumption, but not low-risk physical activity. A healthy lifestyle is inversely linked to risks for 38 of 45 outcomes, including CVD, type 2 diabetes, lung and colon cancer, depression, and chronic kidney disease, as well as overall, CVD, and cancer mortality. Higher EA reduced risk for 25 conditions, such as CVD, certain cancers, chronic liver disease, and fractures; stronger inverse lifestyle-risk associations were observed among less educated individuals. Lifestyle habits explained 47.2% (95% CI: 35.3–59.4%) of the association between genotype-predicted EA and all-cause mortality, mediating a large proportion of associations with CVDs, cancers, dementia, respiratory diseases, and chronic kidney disease.
Conclusions
Higher EA might encourage the adoption of more healthy lifestyle habits, thus promoting healthy aging. Placing greater emphasis on lifestyle modification is essential for individuals with lower EA to effectively address health inequalities associated with EA.
Original languageEnglish
Article number100525
Pages (from-to)1-10
Number of pages10
JournalJournal of Nutrition, Health and Aging
Volume29
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - May 2025

Keywords

  • Healthy lifestyle habit
  • Educational attainment
  • Age-related health conditions
  • Mortality
  • Moderation analysis
  • Mediation analysis

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