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medrxiv; 2023.
Preprint in English | medRxiv | ID: ppzbmed-10.1101.2023.09.08.23295246

ABSTRACT

Background: Change in body weight during the COVID-19 pandemic as an unintended side effect of lockdown measures has been predominantly reported for younger and middle-aged adults. However, information on older adults for which weight loss is known to result in adverse outcomes, is scarce. Aims: Describe body weight change in older adults before, during, and after the COVID-19 lockdown measures and explore putative associated factors with a focus on the period that includes the first six months of the COVID-19 containment measures. Methods: In this study, we analyzed the longitudinal weight change of 472 participants of the Berlin Aging Study II (mean age of 67.5 years at baseline, average follow-up time 10 years). Additionally, differences between subgroups characterized by socio-economic, cognitive, and psychosocial variables as well as morbidity burden, biological age markers (epigenetic clocks, telomere length), and frailty were compared. Results: On average, women and men lost 0.87% (n=227) and 0.5% (n=245) of their body weight per year in the study period covering the first six months of the COVID-19 pandemic. Weight loss among men was particularly pronounced among groups characterized by change in physical activity due to COVID-19 lockdown, low positive affect, premature epigenetic age (7-CpG clock), diagnosed metabolic syndrome, and a more masculine gender score (all variables: p<0.05, n=245). Conclusions: Older participants lost weight with a 2.5-times (women) and 2-times (men) higher rate than what is expected in this age.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Weight Loss , Metabolic Diseases
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