Wellness
Using ‘biological age’ to predict early colorectal cancer risk

New research suggests that a person’s biological age, which can be higher than his or her chronological age – a concept called accelerated ageing – may predict who’s at risk for developing colon polyps, a known risk factor for colorectal cancer.
The findings link accelerated ageing to increased early colorectal cancer risk and indicate that those ageing faster than their actual age – accelerated agers – may benefit from early colon-cancer screening.
Early detection has been shown to improve both treatment options and outcomes for this disease.
Unlike chronological age, which simply counts years lived, biological age is based on physiological markers that reflect the impact of genetics, lifestyle choices and environmental factors. It’s determined through sophisticated DNA analysis.
“Biological age is an interesting concept, and it leads to the idea of accelerated ageing, when your biological age exceeds your chronological age,” explained Shria Kumar, a colorectal cancer researcher at Sylvester and the study’s senior and corresponding author.
For example, she added, if someone is 50, but his or her biological age is 55, that’s five years of accelerated ageing that might be reflected in overall body functioning.
“It sounds pretty theoretical, but actually accelerated ageing has been shown to be predictive of time to death and even of multiple cancers,” Kumar continued, noting that this line of research adds to a growing area of study within epigenetics, which examines the mechanisms behind deteriorating cell functions.”
Rising rates in younger people
Colorectal cancer rates in people under 50, called early-onset colorectal cancer, have been rising. Since 2011, these rates have been increasing by 2 per cent a year in people younger than 50, according to the American Cancer Society.
Accordingly, researchers have been striving to determine the best age to begin screening for colorectal cancer. The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force has lowered its recommended starting age from 50 to 45.
However, this change might not be sufficient to fully address the problem, Kumar noted, because half of early-onset colorectal cancers occur in people under 45, according to the latest statistics from the National Cancer Institute.
Screening methods
There are several ways to screen for colon cancer now, including more convenient stool-sample tests collected at home. But colonoscopy, a more invasive outpatient procedure that requires sedation in a medical facility, remains the gold standard.
During a colonoscopy, the doctor can identify and remove polyps, which are soft-tissue growths that can lead to cancer. Polyps are common, affecting about 20 per cent to 30 per cent of adults, and removing them during colonoscopy can prevent colon cancer.
“What’s really, I think, exciting about the opportunity in colorectal cancer is that we have a clear prevention tactic,” Kumar said. “Colonoscopy is not only early detection, but also cancer prevention.”
Analysing biological age
Some factors that raise a person’s risk of early-onset colorectal cancer also elevate biological age. These include obesity, smoking, alcohol consumption and other lifestyle habits.
For this study, Kumar and Sylvester colleagues Chloe Brown and Maria Yow investigated biological age as a risk factor for colorectal cancer by studying people under 50 who were having colonoscopies.
The team assessed patients’ biological age through extensive DNA analysis of blood samples and compared it with their colonoscopy results.
They discovered that each year of accelerated ageing correlated with a 16 per cent increased risk of developing polyps. Interestingly, the study did not link other factors, such as body-mass index and smoking history, to polyp risk. But it did find that gender was the strongest risk factor for polyps.
“While I think the biological age finding is interesting and, maybe, exciting, the strongest risk factor for having a pre-cancerous polyp remains male sex,” Kumar explained.
“While we continue to look at biological age and other risks, we also need to evaluate why sex is such a differential risk factor.”
Key takeaways
The authors believe risk-based screening for colorectal cancer focused on people with accelerated ageing could yield beneficial results.
“If we can develop a practical model to really identify and target higher risk people and put them through colonoscopy, we can prevent their cancers,” Kumar explained.
She noted that her team will need to conduct more research with larger sample sizes to obtain a clearer picture.
“Ageing is multifaceted, and we need larger studies to establish whether most people’s biological age is the same as their chronological age,” she said.
“It is pretty striking that multiple studies, including ours, have found that biological age provides distinct health information and that could help us prevent cancer.”
News
Dental check-ups flag diabetes risk in over a third of undiagnosed patients

Routine dental check-ups may help detect undiagnosed diabetes, with research finding more than 35 per cent of tested patients had blood sugar levels linked to pre-diabetes or diabetes.
The research screened 911 patients during routine dental visits using a simple finger-prick blood test. None of those flagged had previously reported a history of diabetes.
The test measures HbA1c, which shows how much glucose is attached to haemoglobin in red blood cells.
This reflects average blood sugar levels over about three months and does not require patients to fast beforehand.
The research is described as the largest UK study to date using this test during routine dental appointments and involved 911 patients from an Oral, Dental and Craniofacial Biobank at King’s College London.
Researchers also found higher HbA1c levels among patients with more severe gum disease, adding further evidence of a link between oral health and metabolic health.
Dr Giuseppe Mainas, specialist periodontist and research associate at King’s College London, said: “The findings suggest that dental visits may offer a valuable opportunity to identify those at risk of diabetes, particularly in older patients, those with higher BMI, and people with gum disease.”
Professor Mark Ide, professor of periodontology at King’s College London, added: “When the test reveals high levels of HbA1c, patients can then see their GP to investigate further.
“This is something they might not have done without having the dental screening. Most of the patients in our study were surprised that they had elevated HbA1c levels and had no idea they might have pre-diabetes or diabetes.
“The other benefit of the HbA1c test is not having to fast, which could increase risk of fainting in the dental chair.”
The research team said they now plan to explore wider use of the test across the UK and in other healthcare settings.
According to Diabetes UK, nearly 1.3m people in the UK could be living with type 2 diabetes without being diagnosed.
Early detection is considered important to help reduce complications and related costs to the NHS.
Professor Luigi Nibali, academic lead and director of the periodontology department at King’s College London, said: “The relationship between gum disease and metabolic health is bidirectional since impacts one another, as widely established by previous research.
“The inflammatory process can change the metabolic system, and the metabolic system impacts inflammation further. Gum disease can lead to complications of diabetes, and visa-versa.”
News
The medicinal power of music therapy in aged care

By Tuned Global
Music in the medicine and research space has proved to have significant therapeutic benefits in aged care, treating conditions including dementia, Parkinson’s disease, PTSD and ADHD. Now, with the evolution of music technology and AI, the potential to heal the mind through music has become even more powerful.
At a recent industry event, three experts sat down to discuss this exciting and complex space and to explore how in trying to bring these treatments to patients or the broader market, the not-so-common intersection of medtech and music surfaces a number of challenges.
Music therapy powered by AI

Felicity Baker
Music therapy itself is not new, and therapists have been delivering such interventions in one-on-one sessions and small groups for decades.
The exciting prospect highlighted during the session was that technology and AI can now enable this at scale and with evidence-based approach.
If more people can gain access to music treatment through technology, there is the potential to decrease medication intake, reduce healthcare costs and improve outcomes.
However, scaling these therapies does introduce new considerations and challenges that traditional clinical settings have not had to face.
Felicity Baker is a music therapist, professor at the University of Melbourne and Founder of Matchplus.ai, a sensor-based AI solution that detects early physiological markers of agitation and delivers personalised music interventions to improve the wellbeing of people living with dementia and other cognitive conditions.
With over three decades of experience in dementia care and music therapy, Baker is leading this project at prototype stage to reduce distress, medication reliance and create a more enabling environment for individuals with cognitive decline.
Having successfully secured USD $1.3m from Google.org (the philanthropic arm of Google LLC) to develop scalable technology, Baker has become one of just 15 recipients worldwide from more than 800 applications.
“We’re using wearables to actually develop algorithms that can predict when someone is going to start wandering or is going to get up and have a fall or hit another resident in the nursing home,” she said.
“We’ve got it down to between five and 15 minutes, so a carer or family member can anticipate that something’s going to happen.”
Baker said using AI to help preempt when to use music was one thing, but then what order the music should come in, what kind of music and how to be sensitive to the specific symptoms of people with dementia created further challenges they continue to work on.
Simone Dalla Bella, co-director of the BRAMS laboratory at the University of Montreal is conducting research focused on rhythm interventions for patients with various disorders, including Parkinson’s disease.

Simone Dalla Bella
The interventions include rhythmic serious games such as Beat Workers, and mobile apps such as BeatMove, developed by the start-up BeatHealth that Dalla Bella co-founded. For example, BeatMove can adjust music tempo to help Parkinson’s patients walk more effectively.
“Imagine that you have music in the background that you chose, and the music is going a bit faster than you, so it motivates you to run a bit faster.
“But then if you’re tired and you slow down, the music will follow you gently as if you were running or walking with a theoretical partner,” he said.
“A clinical trial is currently ongoing in France to test a large group of patients with Parkinson’s who basically take the app outside in a park, they use it, and we are seeing beneficial effects of that kind of intervention.”
Navigating Licensing Challenges
The prospect of music-powered therapy is rather inspiring and life-affirming. Providing outcomes for patients with debilitating conditions in a non-invasive way is certainly a noble cause for academics and entrepreneurs alike to take up.
However, what many might not have considered is how these medical applications acquire and manage music rights.
Virginie Chelles, VP and Global Head of Marketing and Communications for music licensing and technology company Tuned Global, described the complexity facing these innovators.
In working with medical technology clients, Chelles highlighted that while founders deeply understand the science and tech behind their products and projects, they often have no knowledge of music industry operations.
“When it comes to us, there is a whole new industry, being the music industry which has little or no connection with the medical industry, [which in itself also] has a lot of regulation,” she said.
In the medical music space, Tuned Global currently works with MediMusic, a UK startup that uses AI to analyse brain responses and select music for anxiety and pain management.
Companies like MediMusic are obviously performing powerful and important work, but in cases where they are not up to speed on all of the requirements to correctly licence music, they are adding layers of risk to an already compliance-heavy environment.

Virginie Chelles
“They’re dealing with the legal side of medicine in being able to have it delivered in NHS Hospitals in the UK, and going for trials and all that is involved.
“There is a lot of paperwork to do there,” Chelles said.
“But then, if they play the wrong track, [a] track that was not licensed, the business is in trouble.
“[They would be looking at lawsuits], and they wouldn’t be paying the rights to the right people.
“There are master rights, there’s publishing rights. [So they think], ‘How do I do that? How do I find the right tracks?’.”
Often in these kinds of apps, an AI personalisation solution will drive the selection of tracks that resonate with certain patients, so another challenge for medtech clients in knowing the extent of what other tracks they will need access to.
Companies must also consider whether their licenses permit training medical algorithms on music assets.
“Thousands of tracks are released every day, and [if you look at what’s being produced] with AI. It’s even more,” she said.
“Many companies don’t need millions of tracks. If you work on dementia, just working on a back catalogue, like the catalog that makes sense for these people when they were in their 20s.
“For us, it helped us to understand what you need to license the right catalog, rather than millions of tracks, because accessing millions of tracks is a lot of money in storage and in processing.”
Addressing music licensing early in tech development
For medtech companies wanting to leverage music, Chelles was direct about the challenges and decisions they face when they first approach music licensing.
A lot of consideration needs to be made about how much music they need, what kind, whether they need commercial music or production music and more.
When MediMusic first engaged Tuned Global, these considerations presented a big challenge.
“Because licensing music is not a science. It’s not predictable, but we can definitely help,” she said.
Elaborating further, Chelles said that companies tended to be more successful when they addressed music licensing early in development rather than treating it as an afterthought.
“It’s going to take as much time to build the music and the licensing and compliance technology as building your medical device or app or science behind it,”
“Talk to a music expert early on, it can be us, but it can also be entertainment lawyers or licensing specialists that are going to be able to help from the beginning … to just understand what it is about.
“We can also help them to build their business case to pitch to those labels, because this can be quite strategic depending on the label and their current objectives. Making big pitches without understanding them or the broader environment could cost a lot of time and money if they don’t sign you up right away.
“Being able to demonstrate and communicate value in this industry on the industry’s terms is really important for success, so if you can work with people that have these relationships and can engage with them it’s very helpful.”
Working with an established music technology company can help medtech startups navigate label negotiations.
Labels recognise that companies already working with licensing specialists have typically secured funding and understand the commercial requirements.
“[The labels are] like, okay, they are legit, because if Tuned Global can work with them, they already have the funding and they understand what they’re doing,” Chelles said.
Securing licensing agreements is only the first step. Companies then need backend technology to access the actual tracks.
Tuned Global maintains 190 million tracks, with the catalog growing daily. Companies must negotiate separately with both master rights holders (the record labels) and publishers who represent musicians and writers.
Commercialising music therapies
Neither researcher came from a background that prepared them for music industry negotiations. Despite publishing in The Lancet and Nature and securing major medical research grants, Baker found music licensing remained unfamiliar territory.
Dalla Bella received more than $USD 3.5m in European research funding but similarly had no training in navigating music rights.
Startup activity at universities is growing, but this has not always been the case.
Baker noted that while the institutions themselves were very supportive and really wanted to push research innovations into the market, there still exists some commercialisation stigmas among some researchers.
“For some researchers, commercialising your research is kind of almost like a dirty word.
“To them it’s like you’re not being true to the science if you want to actually make a company and do something with this,” she said.
Dalla Bella described how moving from pure research into commercial applications required stepping outside his comfort zone.
“Sometimes in science, we’re very closed, right? We do work just in science, in our niche, we are happy with what we do, but then you have to go beyond your comfort zone to start to work with engineers and start to work with a startup company,” he said.
“[I’ve seen for a lot of people] it took time to build this collaboration, this common language, and to be able to work together. After a certain amount of time, you discover the real potential of doing that.”
The future of AI-powered music therapy in aged care
The medical music technology sector is an exciting and expanding space for aged care.
As more innovators enter the industry, the intersection between healthcare regulation and music licensing will likely require more standardised frameworks and understanding of the complexities so they aren’t bogged down or exposed to complications that could cut their journey to provide care short.
For now, companies navigating both industries must build relationships with experts in each domain.
The medical science may be groundbreaking, but without proper music licensing infrastructure, therapeutic applications cannot reach patients or compensate the artists whose work makes treatment possible.
About Tuned Global
Tuned Global is the leading data-driven cloud and software platform that empowers businesses to integrate commercial music into their apps or launch complete streaming experiences using advanced APIs, real-time analytics, licensing solutions, and customisable white-label apps.
Our turnkey solutions for music, audio, and video — coupled with a broad ecosystem of third-party music tech integrations — make us the most comprehensive platform for powering any digital music project.
We streamline complexities in licensing, rights management, and content delivery, enabling rapid innovation and bringing new ideas to life.
Since 2011, we’ve supported 40+ companies in 70+ countries — across telecom, fitness, media, aviation, and more — to deliver innovative music experiences faster and more cost-effectively. For more information, visit www.tunedglobal.com.
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