The study, which is the first to look at what being a twin means for life expectancy, shows that twins have lower mortality rates for both sexes throughout their lifetimes.
"We find that at nearly every age, identical twins survive at higher proportions than fraternal twins, and fraternal twins are a little higher than the general population," said David Sharrow, a postdoctoral researcher at University of Washington (UW).
The data comes from the Danish Twin Registry, one of the oldest repositories of information about twins.
For men, they found that the peak benefit of having a twin came in the subjects' mid-40s. That difference is about 6 percentage points, meaning that if out of 100 boys in the general population, 84 were still alive at age 45, then for twins that number was 90.
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For women, the peak mortality advantage came in their early 60s, and the difference was about 10 percentage points.
"Our results lend support to a big body of literature that shows that social relationships are beneficial to health outcomes," Sharrow said.
"There is benefit to having someone who is socially close to you who is looking out for you. They may provide material or emotional support that lead to better longevity outcomes," Sharrow said.
Sharrow and James Anderson, a UW research professor were looking to tune a mortality model using the data from twins. But when they ran the numbers they stumbled upon an unexpected discovery.
Male twins got a bigger overall longevity boost than women because they had lower mortality rates both for acute causes during their early years and from so-called natural causes past the age of 65, researchers said.
The study was published in the journal PLOS ONE.