This year, the number of retired pensioners in the UK exceeded the number of people under 18 for the first time in history. That’s remarkable in its own right, but the real “population explosion” has been among the oldest of the old — the centenarians. In fact, this group is the fastest-growing demographic in much of the developed world. In the UK, the number of centenarians has increased by 60 per cent since the early twentieth century, and their ranks are set to swell even further, thanks to the ageing baby-boomer generation: by 2030 there will be about a million worldwide.
These trends raise social, ethical and economic dilemmas. Are medical advances artificially prolonging life, with little regard for the quality of that life? If growing numbers of elderly people become dependent on state or family support, society faces skyrocketing costs and commitments. Yet researchers who study the oldest old have made a surprising discovery that presents a less pessimistic view of the future than many anticipate.
It is becoming clear that people who break through the 90-plus barrier represent a physical elite. Far from gaining a longer burden of disability, their extra years tend to be healthy ones. And supercentenarians — people aged 110 or over — are even better examples of ageing well. The average supercentenarian went about their daily lives freely until the age of about 105, some five to ten years longer even than centenarians.
One of the most comprehensive studies comes from Denmark. In 1998 Kaare Christensen, at the University of Southern Denmark, contacted every one of the 3,600 people born in 1905 who were still alive. Assessing their health over the subsequent decade, he found that the proportion who managed to remain independent was consistently around one-third of the total. Each individual risked becoming more infirm, but the unhealthiest died earlier, leaving the strongest behind. In 2005, only 166 people in Christensen’s sample were still alive, but one-third of those were still entirely self-sufficient.
Christensen’s optimistic findings are echoed in studies all over the world. In the UK, Carol Brayne at the University of Cambridge studied 958 people aged over 90 and found that only one-quarter of them were living in accommodation specifically catering for the needs of older people. Research in China reveals that centenarians and nonagenarians spend fewer days ill and in bed than younger elderly groups. Of course, people can live independently without being entirely healthy, and it is true that most centenarians suffer from some kind of ailment, ranging from osteoarthritis to simple loneliness.
Not all the oldest survive by delaying illness or disability, though. Many soldiers went through it. Jessica Evert of Ohio State University examined the medical histories of more than 400 centenarians and found that those who achieve extreme longevity tend to fall into three categories. About 40 per cent were “delayers”, who avoided chronic diseases until after the age of 80. Another 40 per cent were “survivors”, who suffered from chronic diseases before the age of 80 but lived on to tell the tale. The final 20 per cent were “escapers”, who reached their century with no sign of the most common chronic diseases. Intriguingly, one-third of male centenarians were in this category, compared with only 15 percent of women.
The two sexes fare very differently when it comes to longevity. There are far more female centenarians, but the reasons for this are unclear. Certainly, women tend to lead healthier lifestyles, experience fewer serious accidents and visit doctors more often. Men are more prone to risky behaviour and chronic illness, so it must be genetics that allows some men to reach extreme old age. Evidence of this comes from longevity hot-spots.
The Japanese island of Okinawa is the front-runner. At 58 centenarians per 100,000 people, it has the world’s highest proportion in this age group, with Sardinia and Iceland not far behind. All three are relatively isolated island communities, which leads to less genetic variation among inhabitants. In these places, the result has been a predisposition towards a longer life. Of course, members of such communities usually share a particular environment, too, but this alone cannot explain longevity.
Gerontologists emphasise the importance of regular exercise, so anyone aiming to reach a century should not underestimate this. They have also found that the influence on lifespan of social factors such as wealth fades as we age. By comparing 10,000 pairs of Scandinavian twins, Christensen found that genes are key, but that they only start exerting a strong influence on our lifespan after the age of 60. Before then, identical and non-identical twins have largely independent chances of reaching a given age.
Longevity genes have also been identified in abundance in other organisms, including more than 70 in one particular species of worm. Unfortunately, it is a different story in humans: while many genes have been proposed to affect lifespan, very few have been consistently verified across multiple populations.
Notes
- Centenarian: someone who is 100 years or older.
- Baby-boomer: someone born just after the Second World War, a time that saw a rapid increase in birth rates.
- Nonagenarian: someone who is between 90 and 99 years old.
- Gerontologist: a medical professional who specialises in ageing and the problems of older people.