Log on/register
BioMed Central home | Journals A-Z | Feedback | Support | My details
 
Open AccessHighly AccessReview

A Need to Study the Immune Status of Frail Older Adults

Steven C Castle1 email, Koichi Uyemura1 email, Tamas Fulop2 email, Katsuiku Hirokawa3 email and Takashi Makinodan1 email

Geriatric Research, Education and Clinical Center (GRECC), VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System and Multicampus Division of Geriatric and Gerontology, Department of Medicine, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA 90073

Research Center on Aging, Geriatric Division, Faculty of Medicine, University of Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada

Institute of Applied Medicine, Tokyo, Japan

author email corresponding author email

Immunity & Ageing 2006, 3:1doi:10.1186/1742-4933-3-1

The electronic version of this article is the complete one and can be found online at: http://www.immunityageing.com/content/3/1/1

Received: 15 August 2005
Accepted: 19 January 2006
Published: 19 January 2006

© 2006 Castle et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Review

The frail older adult subpopulation, which is growing at a rapid rate, contributes significantly to the increasing global healthcare cost [1]. Many frail older adults are immunologically compromised, and, therefore, succumb to common infections in spite of the availability of antibiotics and other therapeutic measures. It is also not known how repeated or recurrent infections affect the progression of the underlying chronic disease. Thus, there is an urgent need to understand the nature of the diminished immune capacity of frail older adults, for it could provide new insight into developing effective intervention modalities. Unfortunately, very little research has been done to describe and elucidate the immune deficits of the frail older adults. In the past, researchers have been discouraged to study this subpopulation because of its complexity in terms of disease category and disease burden.

In contrast, much is known of the immune status of the healthy older adult subpopulation, for this subpopulation has been investigated extensively over the past three decades. Thus, it is known that T cell-dependent immune functions decline with age [2], and associated with the decline are structural changes in T cells [3]. However, a review of more than 200 scientific articles that evaluated healthy older adults, who were selected on a set of rigorous criteria as defined by the SENEIUR Protocol [4], showed that the magnitude of decline in T cell-dependent immune functions with age is modest [5], relative to that of the aging mouse model [6]. More recently, Sehl and Yates [7] analyzed changes in various physiologic functions with age from 469 studies involving more than 54,000 healthy and frail older adults. The expansive review included 43 immunologic studies of 372 individuals. They found that the mean annual rate of decline with age in immune functions is greater than that of other physiologic functions that were assessed. The authors concluded that the deterioration in immune function in older adults is due not only to aging, but also the presence of chronic disease. This review also underscores the need to evaluate the immune status of frail older adults with chronic diseases.

Recently, the influence of chronic disease on T cell immunity as been investigated [8], using the Cumulative Illness Rating Scale (CIRS) [9]. CIRS is an instrument that measures disease burden in individuals with various chronic diseases, but with no evidence of acute deterioration or infection. The CIRS instrument was originally developed in 1968 and is acknowledged as a user-friendly, comprehensive review of medical problems of 14 organ systems [9]. It is based on a 0 to 4 rating of each organ system. The scale has been validated in older adults living in long-term care facilities and congregate apartments in the community and has demonstrated better validity in predicting healthcare outcomes than functional measures [10]. T cell immunity was based on phytohemagglutinin (PHA)-induced proliferation and production of immunosuppressive interleukin (IL)-10 and immunoenhancing IL-12. The study showed that decrease in T cell proliferation, increase in production of IL-10 and decrease in production of IL-12 are linearly correlated with increase in chronic disease burden (i.e., increased CIRS score), but not with increase in chronologic age, between 51 to 95 years.

The demonstration that reduced immunity in older adults is correlated with chronic disease burden, but not with chronologic age, suggests that chronic disease burden markedly enhances the reduction in immunity of older adults caused by biologic aging. Others have suggested chronic infections, caused by especially cytomegalovirus, and also by Helicobacter pylori, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Chlamydia pneumoniae, Herpes viruses, Epstein-Barr virus, and Hepatitis viruses, could play a role on progression of chronic disease, especially atherosclerosis, and impaired immunity [11-15]. While CIRS does not directly address prior viral infections, if these infections do impact on progression of disease it would be predicted that there would be a correlation between CIRS and evidence of chronic infection. Chronic infections, increased levels of inflammatory mediators, disease progression and frailty have a very complex association, and, furthermore, an unclear temporal relationship. Therefore, at this stage of progress, it would be appropriate and timely, to study the immune status of frail older adults using an instrument, such as the CIRS, to categorize frail older adults according to specific chronic disease and disease burden. The immune status of frail older adults in each category could then be assessed, and immunosuppressive factors produced by specific disease that are present in the microenvironment of immune cells could be identified and their impact on immunity mitigated. Consequently, the compromised immune status of frail older adults could be boosted to that of healthy older adults, thereby improving their innate and adaptive immunologic defense mechanisms to infections and response to vaccination. This should significantly increase their resistance to infectious and other immunocompromised-related diseases, possibly slow the progression of chronic diseases, and, therefore, contribute to the goal of reducing the global healthcare cost.

References

  1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: Public health and aging: trends in aging – United States and worldwide.

    Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 2003 , 52:101-106. OpenURL

  2. Fulop T, Larbi A, Wikby A, Mocchegiani E, Hirokawa K, Pawelec G: Dysregulation of T cell function in the elderly: scientific basis and clinical implications.

    Drugs Aging 2005 , 22(7):589-603. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text OpenURL

  3. Pawelec G, Muller R, Rehbein A, Hahnel K, Adibzadeh M: Human T cell clones as a model for immunosenescence.

    Immunol Rev 1997 , 160:31-43. PubMed Abstract OpenURL

  4. Ligthard GJ, Corberand JX, Fournier C, Galanaud P, Hijmans W, Kennes B, Muller-Hermelink HK: Admission criteria for immunogerontological studies in man: the SENIEUR Protocol.

    Mech Ageing Dev 1984 , 28:47-55. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text OpenURL

  5. Castle SC, Uyemura K, Makinodan T: The SENIEUR Protocol after 16 years: a need for a paradigm shift?

    Mech Ageing Dev 2001 , 122:127-140. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text OpenURL

  6. Hirokawa K: Age-related change in signal transduction of T cells.

    Exp Gerontol 1999 , 134:7-18. Publisher Full Text OpenURL

  7. Sehl M, Yates E: Kinetics of human aging: I. Rates of senescence between ages 30 and 70 years in healthy people.

    J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci 2001 , 56:198-208. OpenURL

  8. Castle SC, Uyemura K, Rafi A, Nagaraj S, Akande O, Makinodan T: Comorbidity is a better predictor of impaired immunity than chronologic age in older adults.

    J Am Geriatric Society 2005 , 53:1565-9. Publisher Full Text OpenURL

  9. Linn BS, Lin MS, Gurel L: Cumulative illness rating scale.

    J Am Geriatric Society 1968 , 16:622-26. OpenURL

  10. Parmelee PA, Thuras PD, Katz IR, Lawton MP: Validation of the cumulative illness rating scale in a geriatric residential population.

    J Amer Geriatric Society 1995 , 43:130-137. OpenURL

  11. Muhlestein JB, Horne BD, Carlquist JF, Madsen TE, Bair TL, Pearson RR, Anderson JL: Cytomegalovirus seropositivity and C-reactive protein have independent and combined predictive value for mortality in patients with angiographically demonstrated coronary artery disease.

    Circulation 2000 , 102:1917-1923. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text OpenURL

  12. Schmaltz HN, Fried LP, Xue QL, Watson J, Leng SX, Semba RD: Chronic cytomegalovirus infection and inflammation are associated with prevalent frailty in community-dwelling older women.

    J Am Geriatric Society 2005 , 53:563-570. Publisher Full Text OpenURL

  13. Wikby A, Ferguson F, Thompson J, Strindhall J, Lofgren S, Nilsson BO, Ernerudh J, Pawelec G, Johansson B: An immune risk phenotype, cognitive impairment, and survival in very late life: impact of allostatic load in Swedish octogenarian and nonagenarian humans.

    J Gerontol Series A Biol Med Sci 2005 , 60:556-65. OpenURL

  14. Castle SC: Impact of age and chronic illness-related immune dysfunction on risk of infections. In Infection Meanagement for Geriatrics in Long-term Care Facilities. Edited by: Yoshikawa TT, Ouslander JG. Marcel Dekker Inc, New York; 2002:33-50. OpenURL

  15. Pawelec G, Akbar A, Caruso C, Effros R, Glubeck-Lebenstein B, Wikby A: Is immunosenescence infectious?

    Trends Immunol 2004 , 25:406-410. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text OpenURL

Have something to say? Post a comment on this article!


© 1999-2010 BioMed Central Ltd unless otherwise stated. Part of Springer Science+Business Media.