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Study Suggests Oral Bacteria May Reveal Biological Age and Future Health Risks - Video
Overview
Your mouth may be revealing more about your aging process than your birth certificate ever could. Scientists have discovered that the bacteria living in the mouth could act as a powerful new marker of biological aging, offering clues about frailty, chronic disease risk, and even lifespan.
The study, published in Nature Communications, analyzed oral microbiome data from more than 4,600 participants in U.S. health surveys. Researchers found that changes in oral bacteria strongly tracked with aging-related health decline, leading them to create a new measure called the Oral Microbiome Aging Acceleration (OMAA) score.
Unlike chronological age, biological age reflects how well the body is actually functioning. While scientists have already explored “gut aging clocks,” this study highlights the mouth as a simpler and more practical place to measure aging-related changes. Oral samples are easy to collect during routine dental or health checkups, making them potentially useful for large-scale screening.
Using machine learning, researchers identified 64 bacterial groups whose abundance shifted consistently with age. They then trained a model to predict a person’s age based on these microbial patterns. When the predicted age exceeded a person’s actual age, the individual had a higher OMAA score—suggesting accelerated biological aging.
The consequences were significant. Every unit increase in the OMAA score was linked to about a 5% higher risk of frailty and all-cause mortality. Higher scores were also associated with poorer kidney function and improved prediction of conditions like cancer and heart attacks when added to traditional risk factors.
Certain bacteria stood out. Higher levels of Rothia were linked to frailty, while Filifactor was associated with inflammation and periodontal disease. Importantly, these aging patterns remained even after excluding people with major oral disease, suggesting the oral microbiome reflects broader systemic aging rather than just dental problems.
In the future, a simple mouth swab may help doctors estimate not just your dental health—but how fast your body is aging overall.
REFERENCE: Zhao, J., Hu, M., Li, S., et al. (2026). Oral microbiome signatures predict biological age and host health. Nature Communications. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-026-72096-2. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-026-72096-2


