Artificial intelligence electrocardiogram-predicted biological age gap and mortality: Capturing dynamic risk with multiple electrocardiograms

Date

2025

Authors

Evans, S.
Howson, S.A.
Booth, A.E.C.
Shahmohamadi, E.
Lim, M.
Bacchi, S.
Jayakumar, M.
Kamsani, S.
Fitzgerald, J.
Thiyagarajah, A.

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Journal article

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Heart Rhythm, 2025; 22(9):e710-e716

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Shaun Evans, Sarah A. Howson, Andrew E.C. Booth, Elnaz Shahmohamadi, Matthew Lim, Stephen Bacchi, Mohanaraj Jayakumar, Suraya Kamsani, John Fitzgerald, Anand Thiyagarajah, Mehrdad Emami, Adrian D. Elliott, Melissa E. Middeldorp, Prashanthan Sanders

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Abstract

Background: Artificial intelligence (AI) can predict biological age from electrocardiograms (ECGs), which is prognostic for mortality. Widely available and inexpensive, serial ECG measurements may enhance individual risk profiles. Objective: We investigated whether repeated measurement of AI-derived biological age identifies divergent biological and chronological aging and whether it significantly improves all-cause mortality hazard estimates. Methods: This single-center, retrospective cohort study included cardiology patients aged 20–90 years with ≥ 2 ECGs recorded. An AI model estimated the biological age from each ECG, and the biological age gap (difference from chronological age) was calculated. Survival was analyzed using Cox proportional-hazards models; a fixed-hazard model with a single ECG per patient and a time-varying hazards model for multiple ECGs. Models were evaluated with the log-likelihood ratio test, and overall mortality risk predictions were compared with the C-index. Results: Among 46,960 patients (337,415 ECGs; median follow-up, 4.5 years), the mean biological aging rate was 0.7 ± 4.1 years/y. Increasing biological age gap was associated with a nonlinear mortality hazard increase, whereas negative gaps had a small protective effect. The multiple-ECG model outperformed the single-ECG model with a higher log-likelihood ratio test value (6280 vs 5225) and improved C-index estimates (0.763 vs 0.747; P = .002). The improvement in predictive accuracy increased with more ECGs per patient, plateauing at ≥ 10 ECGs. Conclusion: Many patients demonstrate biological aging that diverges from chronological aging. AI-derived biological age from a single ECG predicted all-cause mortality, but multiple ECGs significantly increased predictive accuracy. Serial biological age estimates may enhance risk assessment and inform personalized care.

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© 2025 Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of Heart Rhythm Society. All rights are reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.

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