Abstract
In their recent study, Zhang et al. (Aging Clin Exp Res, 2025) report an association between a composite unhealthy lifestyle score and the risk of comorbid type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and arthritis in the CHARLS cohort. While the topic is of significant public health relevance, we have identified several substantive methodological and interpretative limitations that temper the conclusions. Chief among these are the oversimplified and unvalidated definition of lifestyle exposures, particularly "unhealthy diet," and the equal weighting of disparate risk factors without biological justification. Crucially, the analysis fails to adequately control for body mass index, a potent confounder and likely mediator in the T2DM-arthritis pathway. Furthermore, the aggregation of all arthritis subtypes obscures potentially distinct etiologies, and the assertion of "synergy" lacks formal statistical interaction testing. Finally, the study remains purely associational, omitting mechanistic investigation into proposed pathways like inflammation. Future research must address these limitations through precise exposure measurement, rigorous confounding control, disease subtyping, and formal mediation analyses to translate this epidemiological observation into causal insight and actionable prevention strategies.