Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mental and behavioural disorders may accelerate biological ageing, but comprehensive evidence integrating observational and causal approaches is lacking.</p>
METHODS: We performed observational and Mendelian randomisation (MR) analyses. First, 502,411 UK Biobank participants (78,674 with ICD-10 Mental and Behavioural Disorders) were propensity score matched (1:1). Biological Age Acceleration (BAA = biological age - chronological age) was regressed on mental and behavioural disorder status, and robustness checks were conducted using heteroscedasticity-robust and cluster-robust standard errors. Second, two-sample MR assessed causal effects of genetic liability to six mental and behavioural disorders on four ageing biomarkers, using strong genetic instruments (F > 10) and validated through sensitivity analyses including MR-Egger, Cochran's Q, and leave-one-out tests.</p>
RESULTS: Ever having a diagnosis of a mental and behavioural disorder was associated with higher BAA (β = 0.261, 95% CI: 0.229-0.293, P < 0.001). Strongest associations were observed for disorders of psychological development (β = 0.717), organic mental and behavioural disorders (β = 0.395), and mental and behavioural disorders due to psychoactive substance use (β = 0.338). BAA increased with comorbidity count (P-trend <0.001). MR indicated potential causal effects of depression (OR = 5.12 for frailty index), insomnia (OR = 2.04 for frailty index), and anxiety (OR = 1.06 for frailty index) on accelerated ageing, with no evidence of horizontal pleiotropy (MR-Egger intercept P > 0.05). Bipolar disorder was associated with slower epigenetic ageing (OR = 0.71 for GrimAge). Alcohol use disorder increased facial ageing (OR = 1.02). Schizophrenia showed no significant associations.</p>
CONCLUSIONS: Mental and behavioural disorders are observationally and robustly linked to accelerated biological ageing, with a dose-response by comorbidity. Genetic evidence supports potential causal roles for depression, insomnia, and anxiety in promoting ageing, while bipolar disorder may relate to slower epigenetic ageing. Biological ageing should be considered in the long-term management of mental health.</p>