Breaking the 50+ barrier: Cortical speed of sound via quantitative ultrasound as a new age-at-death estimator in older adults
Recommended Citation
Kim J, Leslie E, Kedwaii H. Breaking the 50+ barrier: Cortical speed of sound via quantitative ultrasound as a new age-at-death estimator in older adults. Forensic Sci Int. 2025 Dec;377:112621. doi: 10.1016/j.forsciint.2025.112621. Epub 2025 Aug 19. PMID: 40850013.
Abstract
The increasing number of forensic cases and solitary deaths ("kodokushi") involving older adults warrants targeted methods to serve this growing and vulnerable group. However, age-at-death estimation past midlife remains challenging due to diminished accuracy of traditional macroscopic age markers, often resulting in a single categorization of older age groups as "50 + ." This study evaluates the utility of cortical bone speed of sound (SoS), measured by quantitative ultrasound (QUS), as an alternative biomarker to quantify age-related changes in cortical bone quality and to estimate age-at-death in older adult skeletons. Using QUS, we collected SoS from three peripheral long bones (the radius, tibia, and third phalanx) of 168 anatomical and reference skeletal samples aged 18-103 years. Bayesian linear and generalized additive models were used to model the shift in cortical bone quality from early to late adulthood. Age-at-death predictive model performance was evaluated using correlation (r), mean absolute error (MAE), and credible intervals (CIs). Skeletal SoS reflected nonlinear, sex-specific age-related changes in cortical bone from accrual to loss beyond 40 years. SoS-based age-at-death estimates showed a strong correlation (r ≈ 0.7) with chronological ages, with the lowest MAEs (7.4-8.8 years) observed in the 40-49 and 70-79 age groups. In males, the lowest MAE was observed in the 60-69 age group (3.8 years), and, in females, in the 30-39 age group (5.6 years), followed by the 70-79 age group (6.24 years). This study demonstrates that skeletal SoS offers a biologically justified, non-destructive, fieldwork-suitable alternative to traditional methods for age estimation in older adults.
Type
Article
PubMed ID
40850013
Affiliations
Advocate Christ Medical Center