Olink

Olink®
Part of Thermo Fisher Scientific

Social isolation and 59 common health conditions: insights from observational and genetics analyses

BMC Medicine, 2026

Ai S., Wu Q., Nie Y., Ou Y., He Y., Li P., Ai Q., Feng H., Liu Y., Luo T., Zhang J., Liang Y.

Disease areaApplication areaSample typeProducts
Wider Proteomics Studies
Pathophysiology
Plasma
Olink Explore 3072/384

Olink Explore 3072/384

Abstract

Background

The impacts of social isolation on diverse health conditions and how it contributes to health risks remain unclear. We aimed to investigate the associations of social isolation with 59 health conditions among older adults.

Methods

Participants from the UK Biobank without baseline diagnosis of the included diseases were selected. Social isolation was assessed with three questions. The 59 health conditions included all-cause mortality, 5 cause-specific mortalities, and 53 diseases. We used an instrumental variable from multivariable common factor GWAS in Mendelian randomization (MR) to explore causal links of social isolation with diseases. Omics analyses were conducted to assess the roles of Olink plasma proteins and metabolomics, and PERM was calculated to evaluate the influence of other factors.

Results

A total of 489,741 individuals [266,706 (54.5%) women; mean age 56.5 years (SD 8.1)] were included. During a median follow-up of 12.5 years, social isolation was uncorrelated with the majority of 59 health conditions. Significantly, it was associated with increased risks of all-cause [adjusted HR (aHR) 1.28, 95% CI 1.25–1.32], 5 cause-specific mortalities (aHR range, 1.18–1.38), and 11 specific diseases (aHR range, 1.08–1.17). Living alone was the strongest item of isolation in predicting mortality (aHR range, 1.18–1.45) and selected diseases. MR analyses offered little evidence to support a causal link between social isolation and these diseases. The proteins involved in these associations are predominantly related to “response to stimulus”. Proteomic signatures (PERM, 36%–49%), health behaviours (32%–59%), and socioeconomic factors (22%–42%) were the main explanatory factors linking social isolation to 8 health outcomes.

Conclusions

Social isolation is associated with elevated risks of 17 out of the 59 examined adverse health outcomes, predominantly mortality-related conditions; however, MR analyses indicate an absence of evidence supporting causality for these associations.

Read publication ↗