I used to flinch at the topic of aging. Is there anything we can do about the inevitable?
But recently I've been digging into a new wave of longevity research that is making it an exciting time to be an aging human which is all of us.
It turns out, we all age at varying rates. Super-agers may have great genes, but research shows our habits and routines everything from what we eat and how we move our bodies to who we spend our time with matter a lot, when it comes to aging well.
Now, the next frontier is to target the basic biology of aging and come up with new interventions to slow it down.
Many scientists are optimistic that we're on the cusp of breakthroughs. Not only to help us live longer, but more importantly to extend the number of years we live with good health.
This is the goal of researchers at the Human Longevity Lab at the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. They're recruiting study participants so they can test what kinds of interventions may slow the rate of aging. To that end, I decided to roll up my sleeve for science.
When I arrived, the first step was a quick blood draw. The Potocsnak Longevity Institute is housed on the light-filled 21st floor of Northwestern Memorial Hospital, overlooking Lake Michigan. It felt more like a spa than a doctor's office. I didn't anticipate the vast range of data and insights scientists could glean from a battery of tests.
Over a four-hour period, they performed more than two dozen assessments. At first it felt a bit like an annual physical. They checked my blood pressure, weight, glucose and cholesterol.
NPR's Allison Aubrey has her body composition measured inside a BodPod. Several other tests performed at the longevity lab led by Dr. Douglas Vaughan are used to estimate biological age. Jane Greenhalgh/NPR hide caption
NPR's Allison Aubrey has her body composition measured inside a BodPod. Several other tests performed at the longevity lab led by Dr. Douglas Vaughan are used to estimate biological age.
But then, the tests got a lot more interesting. Inside a small exam room, a medical assistant opened the hinge of a BodPod, a capsule that looks like a submersible. The machine assessed my body composition, determining the ratio of fatty mass to lean mass, which includes muscle. Strength is a key marker of healthy aging, helping us fend off frailty and falls.
Next, I was asked to sniff and identify a range of distinct smells from leather to chocolate to test olfactory function. The loss of smell can be an early sign of disease and cognitive decline. They scanned my retina and took digital images of the inside of my eyes, which can also help detect disease. And I took a memory and cognitive function test, called MOCA. Thankfully, all was healthy.
Then I went through a slew of cardiovascular health tests. They measured my endothelial function, which keeps blood flowing smoothly through the body. They looked at my heart rate variability and pulse-wave velocity, which is an indicator of stiffness of the arteries. I had electrodes placed onto my chest for an electrocardiogram.
Midway through I was feeling a bit nervous, and my mind raced to what ifs.
Of all the tests they performed, the most intriguing is the GrimAge test. This test predicts biological age. It's gauging whether your DNA age is younger, or older, than your actual age, known as chronological age. Conjure images of the Grim Reaper? Yep, that's the idea: The test can estimate how quickly, or slowly, you're aging.
To figure this out, researchers use a technique based on DNA methylation, which is a measure of modifications in our DNA. Basically, as we age, compounds called methyl groups attach to some of our DNA molecules, which can turn genes on or off. Researchers have shown that the higher the proportion of methylated DNA in certain locations, the more accelerated a person's biological age. Published research suggests this is a reliable way to predict life span and health span.
No one wants to find out they're aging faster than their peers, right? But here's the exciting part. Our biological age may be malleable. The hope is that we can slow down our rate of aging by making changes to lifestyle. Down the line, there may be anti-aging pills or other interventions.
Dr. Douglas Vaughan and Dr. John Wilkins of the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and the Potocsnak Longevity Institute. Allison Aubrey/NPR hide caption
Dr. Douglas Vaughan and Dr. John Wilkins of the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and the Potocsnak Longevity Institute.
For researchers, the GrimAge test isn't just a way to estimate DNA age. It's a tool to study whether interventions can alter it.
"That's the big ray of optimism that comes through all of this the possibility that we can slow down aging and extend the health span of people," says Dr. Douglas Vaughan, director of the Longevity Institute. Health span is the number of years we live with good health. "It can be changed very rapidly in experimental models and probably in people, too," he says.
For example, smoking has a very strong effect on methylation. "Tens of thousands of locations gain methylation when you smoke," explains researcher Steve Horvath, who developed the epigenetic clock used as part of the GrimAge test. People with obesity also exhibit higher methylation at certain locations. "Conversely, if you eat vegetables, if you are lean, if you exercise, that slows methylation age," he explains.
Now, of course, it's long been known that smoking and eating poorly are bad for you. But researchers can now test specific interventions to see if it's possible to move the needle.
Vaughan's deep interest in aging took off when he identified a distinct genetic variant in an Amish community in Indiana. People who have the variant are protected from diabetes and have healthier cardiovascular systems compared to people who don't. In the laboratory, when Vaughan engineered mice to have only a 50% level of a protein associated with this mutation, their life spans increased by nearly fourfold. "This was a eureka moment," he says.
He tells his current medical students that in their careers they will prescribe interventions to slow down biological aging in their patients.
"I don't know exactly what that's going to be. It might be a drug. It might be a lifestyle intervention, for all I know it might be gene editing," Vaughan says. "But there are going to be ways that we are going to slow down this process and give people a longer health span."
People who live in the upscale Chicago neighborhood where the Human Longevity Lab is located can expect to live a much longer, healthier life compared to people who live just a few miles away. Vaughan wants to help close this gap.
"I'm worried about the poor soul in south Chicago who has a life expectancy of 55, compared to 92 in the neighborhood where we're standing right now," he says. A stunning difference of more than 30 years. (You can check out life expectancy in your ZIP code here.)
A lot of factors play into this life expectancy gap including poverty, housing, stress and crime, which can all work against health span.
Vaughan and his collaborators are enrolling people from a wide range of ages, ethnic groups, neighborhoods and socioeconomic status to see what works to slow biological aging for everybody.
"There are lots of people who've been dealt a bad hand with regard to aging," Vaughan says. Their goal is to find affordable, evidence-based interventions that can benefit everyone, regardless of socioeconomic status.
For example, there's interest in studying stress, which Vaughan says could be "part of the reason for the discrepancy in the life expectancy in different neighborhoods of Chicago." To study this, he could measure people's biological age at baseline, have them try a stress-reduction program, and test again to see if their results changed.
Vaughan is also interested in studying people with chronic HIV, who tend to age at an accelerated rate. A charitable gift from a Chicago family with a shared interest helped launch the institute. Vaughan's team is considering a range of interventions to test whether they can slow down aging in this population.
"It might be weight training, it might be intermittent fasting, it might be dietary manipulations, it might be drugs that are available now that might have anti-aging effects," Vaughan explains, citing the diabetes drug metformin.
Longevity and health span research is attracting lots of funding and attention, from places like the Hevolution Foundation, which provides grants and early stage investments, and Altos Labs, a biotechnology company, founded by Dr. Rick Klausner, which is investigating ways to reprogram or rejuvenate cells.
Dozens of groups have signaled their intent to compete in the $101 million X-PRIZE global competition focused on treatments that support healthy longevity everything from new drugs or supplements, to devices, to repurposing old drugs for new uses.
"Teams have to come to the starting line and we're going to set up the frameworks by which they prove their therapeutic works," says XPRIZE's Jamie Justice, who is also a researcher at Wake Forest University School of Medicine.
Fortunately, my GrimAge score came back younger than my actual age, though I did get some surprises. I learned that my body composition isn't optimal. Turns out, I need to build more lean muscle mass, which is pretty common as we age especially for women.
With muscle mass, if you don't use it, you lose it. After the age of 30 to 35, muscle starts to slowly decline. And after age 65 or so, this loss accelerates. So it's never too soon to start building a reserve. My goal for this year is to build muscle through resistance training and an optimal diet. And also, to reduce stress.
My experience in the longevity study has motivated me to get started on a new project: How To Thrive As You Age. We'll have more stories on healthy aging interventions coming soon.
As part of this project, we hope you'll share your healthy aging tips with us. What habits or lifestyle hacks have you've adopted to thrive as you age? Please use this form to share your thoughts or email us at Thrive@npr.org.
Series editors Jane Greenhalgh and Carmel Wroth
More here:
The keys to longevity may start in the lab. How aging science is ... - NPR
- MST3K: Jonah Ray on Longevity, Evolution from Netflix to the Gizmoplex - Bleeding Cool News - November 27th, 2024
- Why Personal Health and Wellness Are Key to Business Longevity - Entrepreneur - November 27th, 2024
- How to live longer: 'I'm a doctor - adding two foods to your diet is the key to longevity' - GB News - November 27th, 2024
- The Best Talks of GSA 2024 - Lifespan.io News - November 27th, 2024
- Maren Tschinkel Shares Her 11 Healthy and Happy Habits - Bustle - November 27th, 2024
- Do blue zones, supposed havens of longevity, rest on shaky science? - Science - November 27th, 2024
- 2025 Longevity and Harmony coins recognize symbolism of birds - Coin World - November 27th, 2024
- The Hormonal Blueprint For Longevity And The Science Of Youthfulness - Forbes - November 27th, 2024
- How Has Life Expectancy Changed Throughout History? - Verywell Health - November 27th, 2024
- The key to a long life is avoiding the 'poisonous 5 P's,' says one of the world's top anti-aging experts - Fortune - November 27th, 2024
- Study unveils genetic secrets to longevity in Indian population - The Times of India - November 27th, 2024
- The Long Run: Behind The Song That Predicted Eagles Longevity - Dig! - November 27th, 2024
- Daily Walks Could Add More Than 10 Years to Your Life, New Study Says - Real Simple - November 27th, 2024
- The 5 best supplements for healthy aging, according to a longevity expert - Yahoo Finance - November 27th, 2024
- Longevity Burn-In Test: Updates And Results From 100 TVs - RTINGS.com - November 27th, 2024
- A 90-year-old comedian still does gigs and plays golf. She shared her secrets for staying fit and funny. - Business Insider - November 27th, 2024
- Longevity and Anti-senescence Therapy Global Market is set to reach $36.11 billion by 2028 at a CAGR of 6.4% - EIN News - November 27th, 2024
- Steinberg Hopes that the Runners Club Can Put Chatham on Course to 'Blue Zone' Longevity Status as Part of Mayor's Wellness - TAPinto.net - November 27th, 2024
- Why Brits are keen to go on wellness getaways for longevity in 2025 - Yahoo Lifestyle UK - November 27th, 2024
- 3 ancient foods are the staple of this blue zones longevity diet - Fortune - November 3rd, 2024
- The Fall Fruit Longevity Experts Swear By - Vogue - November 3rd, 2024
- 6 Foods Centenarians Almost Never Eat (and You Shouldn't Either), According to Longevity Experts - Real Simple - November 3rd, 2024
- According To Longevity Experts, This Is The Breakfast You Should Be Eating For A Long Life - Yahoo Life - November 3rd, 2024
- 33-year-old who left the U.S. to live minutes from the ocean in Jamaica: 'I feel like I have a better chance of longevity here' - CNBC - November 3rd, 2024
- The Secret to Longevity? Community. - LVHN News - November 3rd, 2024
- The Real-Life Diet of Longevity Doctor Valter Longo, Who Wants You to Finish Eating Well Before Bedtime - GQ - November 3rd, 2024
- At 80, Jazzercise's founder is thriving. She credits lean protein, weightlifting, and treating herself to a daily Dr Pepper. - Business Insider - November 3rd, 2024
- New Computational Method Links One Mammals Striking Longevity and Resistance to Cancer With Dark Genome - Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center - November 3rd, 2024
- Anti-aging enthusiasts are turning to the drug rapamycin to help extend their livescan it work? A longevity doctor weighs in - CNBC - November 3rd, 2024
- There's 1 Massive Health Benefit Of Travel That We Don't Talk About Enough - HuffPost - November 3rd, 2024
- The Northwestern Lab Trying to Extend Your Life - Chicagomag.com - November 3rd, 2024
- Human Touch Reflects on the Catalyst and Future of the Longevity Boom - Athletech News - November 3rd, 2024
- Fountain Life Develops "Zora AI," the World's First Generative AI Platform Specially Trained in Functional and Longevity Medicine - PR... - November 3rd, 2024
- Cancer patients who stop smoking within the first six months of diagnosis see improved longevity, study finds - Medical Xpress - November 3rd, 2024
- The 80-year-old billionaire Larry Ellison wins plaudits for looking 30 years younger, with the longevity fanatic Bryan Johnson weighing in - AOL - November 3rd, 2024
- Brewing longevity: Reassessing the health impact of coffee - Genetic Literacy Project - November 3rd, 2024
- Heres Why People in Blue Zones Live the Longest, According to Longevity Experts - Real Simple - November 3rd, 2024
- Before trying expensive longevity treatments, focus on these 4 basics of living longer first - Business Insider - October 6th, 2024
- She loved beer and ice cream and lived to 97. Does lifestyle really matter to longevity? - CNN - October 6th, 2024
- Scientists are testing a keto cocktail for longevity and vigor without the high-fat diet - Business Insider - October 6th, 2024
- 5 Things Longevity Researchers Do Every Day to Live Longer and Healthier - Health.com - October 6th, 2024
- Scientists Have Discovered a Dietary Compound That Increases Longevity - SciTechDaily - October 6th, 2024
- The longevity method: inside the wellness retreat that wants you to live better for longer - Harper's Bazaar UK - October 6th, 2024
- Eight-time Olympic champion Isabell Werth on her longevity, success secrets, and impromptu sing-along during Paris 2024 competition - Olympics - October 6th, 2024
- Want to Live a Longer, Healthier, More Meaningful Life? Science Says People With Greater Resilience Enjoy Exceptional Longevity - Inc. - October 6th, 2024
- Longevity in Action: The 91-Year-Old Weaver Redefining Aging - JAPAN Forward - October 6th, 2024
- A 64-year-old who swam the earth's circumference shares his longevity tips - The Caledonian-Record - October 6th, 2024
- Jimmy Carters longevity compared to other U.S. presidents - FlowingData - October 6th, 2024
- The 'Healthy' Habit That's Taking Years Off Your Life, According to Longevity Experts - Parade Magazine - October 6th, 2024
- Common food ingredient that promotes longevity found by scientists - The Times of India - October 6th, 2024
- Maryland Department Of Aging Launches Longevity Ready Maryland Work Groups - pasadenavoice.com - October 6th, 2024
- If You Want To Live A Long Healthy Life, Experts Say You Should Avoid Doing These 6 Things - BuzzFeed - October 6th, 2024
- Aging is the inflation of life. An emerging crop of longevity biotech companies needs investment to beat it - Fortune - September 13th, 2024
- On this island in Italy, people often live to 100here are 4 of their key habits for a long, happy life - CNBC - September 13th, 2024
- This 5-second walking test can tell you how well you're aging - Business Insider - September 13th, 2024
- Maxwell Sociologists Receive $3.8M to Research Health and Longevity - Syracuse University News - September 13th, 2024
- How Long Do You Expect to Live? It Pays to Make an Educated Guess. - MSN - September 13th, 2024
- Want to live for longer? These are hands down the best workouts for boosting longevity, according to top trainers - Marie Claire UK - September 13th, 2024
- Unlocking the Power of Healthy Longevity: Demographic Change, Non-communicable Diseases, and Human Capital - World Bank Group - September 13th, 2024
- Growth vs Profitability: The key to startup longevity - Moneycontrol - September 13th, 2024
- Newly Discovered Gene Could Be the Secret to Longevity - SciTechDaily - September 13th, 2024
- Poverty and longevity: mutually exclusive what if we thought more about the link between housing and health? - Real Change News - September 13th, 2024
- People in Blue Zones swear by beans for healthy aging here are 3 longevity-boosting bean dishes from a recipe developer - Business Insider - September 13th, 2024
- The Key to Healthy Aging and Longevity - Daily Item - September 13th, 2024
- Associations Between Professional Sports and Longevity - Lifespan.io News - September 13th, 2024
- Samuel L. Jackson Reflects on His Longevity in Hollywood: 'I've Been Kind of Fortunate' (Exclusive) - PEOPLE - September 13th, 2024
- The New Map of Life - Stanford Center on Longevity - August 7th, 2024
- Longevity: Lifestyle strategies for living a healthy, long life - August 7th, 2024
- Halia Therapeutics' CEO, Dr. David J. Bearss, to Present Groundbreaking Research on Chronic Inflammation and Aging at the 3rd Edition Global Longevity... - August 7th, 2024
- The 7 Keys to Living Longer and Healthier - The New York Times - July 2nd, 2024
- Healthy Longevity The Nutrition Source - July 2nd, 2024
- Beyond Air® Schedules Fiscal Year End 2024 Financial Results Conference Call and Webcast - May 24th, 2024
- NANOBIOTIX to Present at the Jefferies Global Healthcare Conference - May 24th, 2024
- Kane Biotech Announces First Quarter 2024 Financial Results - May 24th, 2024
- Tizona Therapeutics Presents Phase 1b TTX-080 Clinical Data in Advanced Colorectal Cancer and Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma at ASCO 2024 - May 24th, 2024
- Inotiv, Inc. to Participate in Upcoming Craig Hallum and Jefferies Investor Conferences - May 24th, 2024
- Evaxion to Present New Positive Data from Ongoing Phase 2 Study on Lead Vaccine Candidate EVX-01 at the American Society of Clinical Oncology Annual... - May 24th, 2024
- Genmab to Showcase Data in Various Patient Populations to be Presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Annual Meeting - May 24th, 2024
- Kymera Therapeutics to Present New Clinical Data from Ongoing Phase 1 Trial of MDM2 Degrader KT-253 at ASCO Annual Meeting - May 24th, 2024
- Theratechnologies’ Sudocetaxel Zendusortide ASCO 2024 Presentation Demonstrates Signs of Long-Term Efficacy and Manageable Safety Profile in... - May 24th, 2024