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Defining an ageing-related pathology, disease or syndrome: International Consensus Statement

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Defining an ageing-related pathology, disease or syndrome: International Consensus Statement. / International Consortium for the Classification of Ageing-Related Pathologies (ICCARP); Short, Emma; Calimport, Stuart et al.
In: GeroScience, Vol. 47, No. 2, 30.04.2025, p. 1713-1720.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

International Consortium for the Classification of Ageing-Related Pathologies (ICCARP), Short, E, Calimport, S & Bentley, B 2025, 'Defining an ageing-related pathology, disease or syndrome: International Consensus Statement', GeroScience, vol. 47, no. 2, pp. 1713-1720. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11357-024-01315-9

APA

International Consortium for the Classification of Ageing-Related Pathologies (ICCARP), Short, E., Calimport, S., & Bentley, B. (2025). Defining an ageing-related pathology, disease or syndrome: International Consensus Statement. GeroScience, 47(2), 1713-1720. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11357-024-01315-9

Vancouver

International Consortium for the Classification of Ageing-Related Pathologies (ICCARP), Short E, Calimport S, Bentley B. Defining an ageing-related pathology, disease or syndrome: International Consensus Statement. GeroScience. 2025 Apr 30;47(2):1713-1720. Epub 2024 Sept 21. doi: 10.1007/s11357-024-01315-9

Author

International Consortium for the Classification of Ageing-Related Pathologies (ICCARP) ; Short, Emma ; Calimport, Stuart et al. / Defining an ageing-related pathology, disease or syndrome : International Consensus Statement. In: GeroScience. 2025 ; Vol. 47, No. 2. pp. 1713-1720.

Bibtex

@article{3d0dccc6e35f43ddbecb9a1b0745c535,
title = "Defining an ageing-related pathology, disease or syndrome: International Consensus Statement",
abstract = "Around the world, individuals are living longer, but an increased average lifespan does not always equate to an increased health span. With advancing age, the increased prevalence of ageing-related diseases can have a significant impact on health status, functional capacity and quality of life. It is therefore vital to develop comprehensive classification and staging systems for ageing-related pathologies, diseases and syndromes. This will allow societies to better identify, quantify, understand and meet the healthcare, workforce, well-being and socioeconomic needs of ageing populations, whilst supporting the development and utilisation of interventions to prevent or to slow, halt or reverse the progression of ageing-related pathologies. The foundation for developing such classification and staging systems is to define the scope of what constitutes an ageing-related pathology, disease or syndrome. To this end, a consensus meeting was hosted by the International Consortium to Classify Ageing-Related Pathologies (ICCARP), on February 19, 2024, in Cardiff, UK, and was attended by 150 recognised experts. Discussions and voting were centred on provisional criteria that had been distributed prior to the meeting. The participants debated and voted on these. Each criterion required a consensus agreement of ≥ 70% for approval. The accepted criteria for an ageing-related pathology, disease or syndrome were (1) develops and/or progresses with increasing chronological age; (2) should be associated with, or contribute to, functional decline or an increased susceptibility to functional decline and (3) evidenced by studies in humans. Criteria for an ageing-related pathology, disease or syndrome have been agreed by an international consortium of subject experts. These criteria will now be used by the ICCARP for the classification and ultimately staging of ageing-related pathologies, diseases and syndromes.",
author = "{International Consortium for the Classification of Ageing-Related Pathologies (ICCARP)} and Emma Short and Stuart Calimport and Barry Bentley and David Clancy and Jemma Kerns and Christopher Plack and Caroline Weight",
year = "2025",
month = apr,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1007/s11357-024-01315-9",
language = "English",
volume = "47",
pages = "1713--1720",
journal = "GeroScience",
issn = "2509-2715",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Defining an ageing-related pathology, disease or syndrome

T2 - International Consensus Statement

AU - International Consortium for the Classification of Ageing-Related Pathologies (ICCARP)

AU - Short, Emma

AU - Calimport, Stuart

AU - Bentley, Barry

AU - Clancy, David

AU - Kerns, Jemma

AU - Plack, Christopher

AU - Weight, Caroline

PY - 2025/4/30

Y1 - 2025/4/30

N2 - Around the world, individuals are living longer, but an increased average lifespan does not always equate to an increased health span. With advancing age, the increased prevalence of ageing-related diseases can have a significant impact on health status, functional capacity and quality of life. It is therefore vital to develop comprehensive classification and staging systems for ageing-related pathologies, diseases and syndromes. This will allow societies to better identify, quantify, understand and meet the healthcare, workforce, well-being and socioeconomic needs of ageing populations, whilst supporting the development and utilisation of interventions to prevent or to slow, halt or reverse the progression of ageing-related pathologies. The foundation for developing such classification and staging systems is to define the scope of what constitutes an ageing-related pathology, disease or syndrome. To this end, a consensus meeting was hosted by the International Consortium to Classify Ageing-Related Pathologies (ICCARP), on February 19, 2024, in Cardiff, UK, and was attended by 150 recognised experts. Discussions and voting were centred on provisional criteria that had been distributed prior to the meeting. The participants debated and voted on these. Each criterion required a consensus agreement of ≥ 70% for approval. The accepted criteria for an ageing-related pathology, disease or syndrome were (1) develops and/or progresses with increasing chronological age; (2) should be associated with, or contribute to, functional decline or an increased susceptibility to functional decline and (3) evidenced by studies in humans. Criteria for an ageing-related pathology, disease or syndrome have been agreed by an international consortium of subject experts. These criteria will now be used by the ICCARP for the classification and ultimately staging of ageing-related pathologies, diseases and syndromes.

AB - Around the world, individuals are living longer, but an increased average lifespan does not always equate to an increased health span. With advancing age, the increased prevalence of ageing-related diseases can have a significant impact on health status, functional capacity and quality of life. It is therefore vital to develop comprehensive classification and staging systems for ageing-related pathologies, diseases and syndromes. This will allow societies to better identify, quantify, understand and meet the healthcare, workforce, well-being and socioeconomic needs of ageing populations, whilst supporting the development and utilisation of interventions to prevent or to slow, halt or reverse the progression of ageing-related pathologies. The foundation for developing such classification and staging systems is to define the scope of what constitutes an ageing-related pathology, disease or syndrome. To this end, a consensus meeting was hosted by the International Consortium to Classify Ageing-Related Pathologies (ICCARP), on February 19, 2024, in Cardiff, UK, and was attended by 150 recognised experts. Discussions and voting were centred on provisional criteria that had been distributed prior to the meeting. The participants debated and voted on these. Each criterion required a consensus agreement of ≥ 70% for approval. The accepted criteria for an ageing-related pathology, disease or syndrome were (1) develops and/or progresses with increasing chronological age; (2) should be associated with, or contribute to, functional decline or an increased susceptibility to functional decline and (3) evidenced by studies in humans. Criteria for an ageing-related pathology, disease or syndrome have been agreed by an international consortium of subject experts. These criteria will now be used by the ICCARP for the classification and ultimately staging of ageing-related pathologies, diseases and syndromes.

U2 - 10.1007/s11357-024-01315-9

DO - 10.1007/s11357-024-01315-9

M3 - Journal article

VL - 47

SP - 1713

EP - 1720

JO - GeroScience

JF - GeroScience

SN - 2509-2715

IS - 2

ER -