Late-life mortality deceleration
In gerontology, late-life mortality deceleration is the phenomenon of hazard rate increasing at a decreasing rate in late life – rather than increasing exponentially as in the Gompertz law – and in some cases plateauing (asymptoting) at a constant rate. Graphically, on a log-linear semi-log plot (linear in the x-axis of age, logarithmic in the y-axis of hazard rate), an exponential function becomes linear, and the Gompertz law amounts to the hazard rate increasing linearly with age. Late-life mortality deceleration corresponds to hazard rate increasing more slowly than linearly (on a log-linear graph), instead curving and possibly plateauing.
Late-life mortality deceleration is a well-established phenomenon in insects,[1] who often spend much of their life in a constant hazard rate region, but it is much more controversial in mammals:[2] rodent studies have found varying conclusions, with some finding short-term periods of mortality deceleration in mice, others not finding such, and baboon studies show no mortality deceleration. An analogous deceleration occurs in failure rate of manufactured products; this analogy is elaborated in the reliability theory of aging and longevity.[1][3]
Late-life mortality deceleration was first proposed as occurring in human aging, in (Gompertz 1825) (which also introduced the Gompertz law), and observed as occurring in humans in (Greenwood & Irwin 1939), and has since become one of the pillars of the biodemography of human longevity – see history; here "late life" is typically "after 85 years of age". However, a recent paper, (Gavrilov & Gavrilova 2011), concludes that mortality deceleration is negligible up to the age of 106 in the population studied (beyond this point, reliable data were unavailable) and that the Gompertz law is a good fit, with previous observations of deceleration being spurious, with various causes, including bad data and methodological problems – see criticism.
The primary reference for this article is (Gavrilov & Gavrilova 2011), which provides a detailed historical overview and discussion, together with current criticism.
Phenomena
Three related terms are used in this context:
- Late-life mortality deceleration
- Hazard rate increasing at a decreasing rate (rather than increasing log-linearly as in the Gompertz law).
- Mortality leveling-off
- More strongly, hazard rate eventually stops increasing (or rather, asymptotes towards a limit), and then proceeds at a constant rate (or rather, approaches a constant rate), yielding (slightly sub-)exponential decay, as in radioactive decay.
- Late-life mortality plateau
This is used synonymously with "mortality leveling-off", or rather to refer to the region where hazard rate is approximately constant.
History
A brief historical review is given in (Gavrilov & Gavrilova 2011, 2. Mortality at Advanced Ages: A Historical Review (pp. 433–435)); a detailed survey is given in (Olshansky 1998).
Late-life mortality deceleration was first proposed as occurring in human aging, in (Gompertz 1825), which also introduced the Gompertz law.[4] It was observed and quantified in (Greenwood & Irwin 1939), and reproduced in many later studies. Greenwood and Irwin wrote:
- "the increase of mortality rate with age advances at a slackening rate, that nearly all, perhaps all, methods of graduation of the type of Gompertz’s formula over-state senile mortality"[5]
- "the possibility that with advancing age the rate of mortality asymptotes to a finite value"[5]
- "the limiting values of qx [one-year probability of death] are 0.439 for women and 0.544 for men"[6]
Following these studies, late-life mortality deceleration became one of the pillars of the theory of biodemography of human longevity, and models have incorporated it. It has been criticized at times, and recently has been very seriously criticized; see below.
Criticism
Statistical studies of extreme longevity are difficult for a number of factors. Firstly, because few people live to very old ages, a very large population is required for such studies, ideally all born and living in similar conditions (same country, same birth year). In small countries, a single birth year cohort is insufficiently numerous for statistics, and thus multiple years are often used. Secondly, due to the great ages, accurate records of persons living over 100 years require records dating from the late 19th or early 20th century, when such record-keeping was often not high-quality; further, there is a tendency to exaggerate one's age, which distorts data. Thirdly, granularity is an issue – ideally exact day of birth and death would be used; using only year of birth and death introduces granularity, which adds bias (as discussed below).
(Gavrilov & Gavrilova 2011) examined single birth-year cohorts from the United States Death Master File, using the method of extinct generations, and found that the effect disappeared if various distorting factors were removed. Specifically, they conclude that mortality deceleration is negligible up to the age of 106 in the population studied (beyond this point, reliable data were unavailable) and that the Gompertz law is a good fit, with previous observations of deceleration being spurious, with various causes, discussed below.
Why was mortality deceleration observed?
Given that mortality deceleration in humans had been observed in various studies, but disappeared on the careful analysis (of single-year cohorts in the US) in (Gavrilov & Gavrilova 2011), it is natural to ask what causes this discrepancy – why was mortality deceleration observed?
(Gavrilov & Gavrilova 2011) propose several causes; notable, in each instance when such a factor is corrected or diminished, the fit with the Gompertz law becomes better.
Data quality:
- Age exaggeration
- There is at times a tendency for old people to exaggerate their ages; this reduces apparent mortality.
Technical:
- Use of probability of death (over an discrete interval of time, usually one year), rather than the hazard rate (force of mortality; instantaneous rate)
- Probabilities of death can be reconstructed using the Sacher formula, if necessary.
- Use of biased estimators of theoretical hazard rate
- Since the Gompertz law is log-linear, working on a semi-log scale and taking the central difference quotient of the logarithm yields an unbiased and maximum likelihood estimator (assuming intervals and change in the hazard rate are small), but other methods, such as the "actuarial estimate", yield bias (especially due to concavity of an exponential function on a linear scale).
Methodology:
- Mixing together several birth cohorts with different mortality levels
- Using cross-sectional instead of cohort data
- Crude assumptions, such as uniformity of death over a time interval
- For example, if hazard rate is high, significantly more deaths should be expected in the first month of the period than the last month (since fewer people survive to the end); assuming that deaths occur evenly throughout the period or in the middle of the period overstates length of life.
Causes
Several causes are proposed for late-life mortality:[1]
- Population heterogeneity (first proposed in (Beard 1959)), is by far the most common explanation of mortality deceleration. Even if individual hazard rate follows a Gompertz law, if the population is heterogeneous, the population hazard rate may exhibit late-life deceleration.
- Redundancy exhaustion – in the reliability theory of aging, an organism's redundancy (reserves) are exhausted at extremely old ages, so every random hit results in death. In more detailed accounts, this only holds in relatively simple organisms – in more complex organisms with various subsystems, deceleration is less present or entirely absent.
- Less risky behavior and more sheltered environment for older people (Greenwood & Irwin 1939).
- Various evolutionary explanations.
Modeling
Late-life mortality deceleration can be modeled via modifications of the Gompertz law, using various logistic models.
Relevance
The rates of late-life mortality are important for pensions. For example, the mortality rates in late life (after age 85) are of particular interest for the baby boom generation, which will reach this age starting in 2030, and for pensions funding calculations.
Late-life mortality rates are of basic importance for understanding aging, both for organisms generally, and for humans specifically.
References
- 1 2 3 (Gavrilov & Gavrilova 2011, p. 434)
- ↑ (Gavrilov & Gavrilova 2011, pp. 433–434)
- ↑ Economos, A. C. 1979. "A Non-Gompertzian Paradigm for Mortality Kinetics of Metazoan Animals and Failure Kinetics of Manufactured Products", AGE 2: 74–76.
- ↑ (Gavrilov & Gavrilova 2011, p. 433)
- 1 2 (Greenwood & Irwin 1939, p. 14)
- ↑ (Greenwood & Irwin 1939, p. 21)
- Beard, R. E. (1959), "Note on Some Mathematical Mortality Models", in E. W. Wolstenholme and M. O. O’Connor, The Lifespan of Animals, Boston: Little, Brown, pp. 302–311
- Gavrilov, Leonid A.; Gavrilova, Natalia S. (2011), "Mortality Measurement at Advanced Ages: A Study of the Social Security Administration Death Master File" (PDF), North American Actuarial Journal: 432–447, Press Release: Mortality Grossly Underestimated at Older Ages, New Study Finds
- Gompertz, B. (1825). Â "On the Nature of the Function Expressive of the Law of Human Mortality, and on a New Mode of Determining the Value of Life Contingencies" Check
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value (help). Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. 115: 513–585. doi:10.1098/rstl.1825.0026. - Olshansky, S. J. (1998), "On the Biodemography of Aging: A Review Essay", Population and Development Review, 24: 381–393, doi:10.2307/2807981
External links
- Late-Life Mortality Deceleration, Mortality Levelling-off, Mortality Plateaus, Population Heterogeneity (models) – references