Characterizing Deficit Accumulation Among Gulf War Era Veterans

J Frailty Aging. 2024;13(3):300-306. doi: 10.14283/jfa.2024.44.

Abstract

Background: Veterans of the first Gulf War (1990-1991) are reaching middle and older adulthood in differing degrees of health and biological age. Many Gulf War veterans report myriad negative symptoms classified as Gulf War illness (GWI), a chronic multi-symptom illness.

Objectives: To describe and analyze deficit accumulation, among veterans with Severe GWI (SGWI+) and those without Severe GWI (SGWI-), to assess the association between a medically unexplained illness and aging.

Design: This study uses a retrospective cohort design with quasi-longitudinal data.

Setting: The recruitment sample included 10,042 Gulf War era veterans across all four US Census regions.

Participants: The analytic sample included 1,054 participants of the GWECB for whom SGWI case status could be determined and who had valid responses for at least 90% of the deficits included in the deficit accumulation index.

Measurements: Chronic health conditions were retroactively reported, including year of diagnosis, enabling us to create a longitudinal measure of deficit accumulation. This deficit accumulation index (DAI) ranged from 0-1 for each respondent in each year between 1991-2013. We compare veterans with SGWI+ to those with SGWI- using the CDC case definition.

Results: Most veterans in our sample could expect to spend more years with moderate or substantial deficits than without deficits. SGWI+ was associated with spending more years with substantial deficits than those with SGWI-. Veterans in middle age (age 35-65) experienced more years with substantial deficits than younger veterans. Individuals with SGWI+ had 13 times the hazard of accumulating substantial deficits than those without.

Conclusions: This study demonstrated that veterans with SGWI+, even those in midlife, experienced aging as measured by accumulating deficits. Practitioners should consider patients with multi-symptom illnesses as at risk of accelerated aging, tailoring treatments to address patients' holistic needs.

Keywords: Deficit accumulation; aging; disease burden; life tables.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Aged
  • Aging / physiology
  • Female
  • Gulf War*
  • Humans
  • Longitudinal Studies
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Persian Gulf Syndrome* / epidemiology
  • Retrospective Studies
  • United States / epidemiology
  • Veterans* / statistics & numerical data