New blood tests can reveal your life expectancy
New blood tests can reveal your life expectancy
Voltor Longo mentioned this new work as being very promising so it likely is a better way to measure biological age. Personally I haven't taken any such test because I haven't found one good and affordable enough - if this gets commercialized it might be the ticket.
OTOH while my health is better than when I was 20, do I really want to know what the biology says? All tests are subject to error, and I don't do measurements unless I know how to mitigate a negative result. I can't do anything beyond what I'm already doing for health, so there's not much point, unless the number comes out fantastic (which I guess it probably would honestly) which would have positive psychological benefits.
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OK, I now have the results of our LifeExtension blood work done four days ago in preparation for calculating our DNAm PhenoAge from the Levine, et al paper referenced above. The actual calculation is rather formidable, involving lots of exponentials and natural logarithms, so instead of using Excel I wrote a Mathematica notebook to do the evaluation (which is available HERE). The paper provides a procedure for calculating the probability of mortality in the next 10 years and what they call the "DNAm PhenoAge", which is based on this 10-year mortality probability. My wife and I had these blood tests done in preparation for several monthly rounds of senolytic treatments with first Fisetin and then D+Q, which we started a few days ago.
The results of the calculations (assuming that I did them correctly) are rather shocking. I just had my 84-year birthday and my wife will turn 79 in a couple of weeks. The calculations say that I have a 97.8% chance of mortality in the next 10 years and that my wife's mortality probability is 72.5%. Further my DNAm PhenoAge is 98.7 years and hers in 86.6 years.
Looking at what goes into producing the above values, the three most important factors are: (1) actual age, (2) red cell distribution width, and (3) mean cell volume. The least important contribution to the calculation is the C-reactive protein, a measure of inflammation. I find this rather surprising and counter-intuitive. I would expect inflammation to play a large role in mortality and blood cell volume and distribution width to be rather minor factors.
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Just curious when the Levine et al paper on Phenotypic age which Dan refers to in his original post will be published. For the moment it is still at preprint level.
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Thanks for sharing this! I have it a try, and compared it with AgingAI and the RealAge test and write up my results here:
http://www.nickengerer.org/longevity-and-wellness/three-biological-age-tests