Comment in 2023

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  • China faces urgent challenges associated with population aging. In this Comment, we summarize China’s adoption of long-term care insurance and underscore its importance for social and economic wellbeing. We provide recommendations for a future of sustainable and healthy aging in China.

    • Simiao Chen
    • Linye Li
    • Chen Wang
    Comment
  • The intestinal epithelium serves as a barrier that facilitates interaction between intrinsic and environmental factors. Aging is accompanied by the gradual deterioration of this barrier. We postulate that barrier dysfunction results from defects in epithelial membrane trafficking that exacerbate age-related metabolic imbalances. Herein, we integrate barrier integrity, protein homeostasis, membrane trafficking and intracellular lipid sensing into an age-determining mechanism.

    • Lexus Tatge
    • Rene Solano Fonseca
    • Peter M. Douglas
    Comment
  • Aging is a major risk factor for vascular disease. Increased levels of milk fat globule-EGF factor 8 (MFG-E8) are associated with many age-related arterial changes, but the mechanisms remain unclear. We propose that these detrimental effects may result from medin, a fragment of MFG-E8 that forms a highly common vascular amyloid.

    • Jillian Madine
    • Hannah A. Davies
    • Jonas J. Neher
    Comment
  • Population aging is a global challenge that poses particular difficulties for low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). So far, there is a dearth of data that describe how aging affects Arab LMICs, which have distinct family structures, caregiving traditions, medical challenges and exposure to climate change. The planned Longitudinal Study of Egyptian Healthy Aging (AL-SEHA) — a member of the cross-nationally comparative family of aging studies around the world — is designed to address these knowledge gaps.

    • Sara A. Moustafa
    • Axel Boersch-Supan
    • Mohamed Salama
    Comment
  • Studies have identified sex and/or gender differences in Alzheimer’s disease, but few have examined other dementias. We highlight sex and gender differences in other dementias, discuss sociocultural factors and provide a framework for future global studies.

    • Clara Vila-Castelar
    • Chinedu Udeh-Momoh
    • Michelle M. Mielke
    Comment
  • The World Health Organization (WHO) blueprint for dementia research provides a roadmap to addressing the challenges in the field and reshaping our approach to dementia research. This Comment focuses on how to operationalize the drivers of research highlighted in the blueprint to make research more equitable, impactful and global.

    • Rodrigo Cataldi
    • Perminder S. Sachdev
    • Tarun Dua
    Comment
  • A major transformation in dementia diagnosis and care appears imminent and will depend on three major types of biomarkers: molecular imaging, blood-based biomarkers and cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers. Each modality has unique strengths and limitations that suggest its optimal uses in research, clinical trials and clinical diagnosis.

    • Suzanne E. Schindler
    • Alireza Atri
    Comment
  • The Global Council on Brain Health summarizes disparities that occur among the opportunities of different groups for adopting and sustaining brain-healthy behaviors across the lifespan. Here, we highlight challenges for people to maintain a healthy mind throughout their lives and suggest solutions for society to help people to achieve greater equity in brain health.

    • Sarah Lenz Lock
    • Lindsay R. Chura
    • Jonathan Peterson
    Comment
  • There is tremendous interest in the development of drugs that target senescent cells (‘senolytic’ drugs) to treat a range of age-related morbidities. However, studies in mice that demonstrate impaired tissue repair following clearance of senescent cells raise questions about the potential risks of senolytic therapies. Closer examination of the available studies reveals the hopeful possibility of a ‘therapeutic window’ in which these risks can be minimized.

    • Sundeep Khosla
    Comment