A Spreadsheet for Calculating Your Levine Phenotypic Age
An excellent paper by M. E. Levine, et al, entitled "An epigenetic biomarker of aging for lifespan and healthspan" describes a technique for combining nine blood-work values with calendar age to calculate your Mortality Score (probability of death in the next ten years) and your Phenotypic Age, i.e., your apparent biological age as implied by your blood variables. The calculation procedure is rather arcane, involving non-obvious unit conversions, exponentials, and logarithms, so I have produced an Excel spreadsheet (LINK) for performing these calculations.
Levine, et al., also used an elaborate DNA analysis of many blood samples to find what they call the DNAm PhenoAge, a measure of the degree of DNA methylation present, a phenomenon associated with aging. They correlate this measure with the Phenotypic Age, showing that they track very well. My spreadsheet uses a fit to their plots to estimate your DNAm PhenoAge and the modified Mortality Score that it implies.
You may already have blood-work giving the nine blood variables needed to use this spreadsheet, but if not they can be obtained by purchasing the blood-work of LifeExtension's Chemistry Panel & Complete Blood Count (CBC) ($35) and their C-Reactive Protein (CRP), Cardiac ($42). On the spreadsheet at the upper line of blue numbers, you simply enter your values in place of the ones presently there and enter your decimal calendar age in the last column. The calculated results then appear in red on the last line.
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albedo said:
JGC
Along the lines of the answer you got from Dr. Horvath (thank you), Dr. Levine answered my note on the relative roles played by the clinical biomarkers used for the phenotypic age calculation. While recognizing the RDW's big impact on the estimate, she warns the weights listed in the table were not standardized to allow for a direct comparison.JGC DanMcL
Thinking about the weights in Levine et al paper and the discussion here and in the previous thread on their relative importance, I wonder if you have any take on her reply that they are not standardized to allow for a direct comparison.
Happy and healthy new year!
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Thank you JGC for making this excellent spreadsheet.
From your calculations RDW, MCV and glucose are the top three markers affecting PhenoAge. It seems all three can be changed with dietary interventions, namely reducing iron, increasing HDL, and altering food choices to reduce insulin. I looked at my bloodwork from twelve years ago and I my PhenoAge has declined 10 years. I am now 57 with a PhenoAge of 45. My wife is 48 with a PhenoAge of 33.
With this new knowledge I will work on reducing iron further and see what the calculator has to say.
It might be useful for people to share their data and the slowest agers habits might then be able to be copied by others.
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Anyone here who tried to compare aging.ai and Levine's Phenotypic Age results?
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Thanks much JGC! Finally, a decent (r=.94 vs. .8 for aging.ai according to Mike Lustgarten, ie. much better correlation).
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Thanks for the great info JGC! I just got my bloodwork the other day but they gave me a BUN/creatinine ratio vs. just creatinine and I haven't been able to get the spreadsheet to work since I am retired and don't have a spreadsheet program. I have all the other info and would love to know my pheno age after a year on Met and 8 months on Rap. etc. Uping my DHEA, Zn, and HGH secretagogues after the Fahy art. Any suggestions anyone? I imagine if I call and pester them, I could get a creatinine value since they must have it since they have the ratio! I have been using fisetin, quercetin and PL as well as the LEF senolytic tabs, and NMN, etc., so am doing pretty good at 75.
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Dennis said:
Uping my DHEA, Zn, and HGH secretagogues after the Fahy art.What do you take as HGH secretagogues? Also have you ever checked also your IGF-1? Just curious, need to have that in good balance too, not too high, not too low.
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I used Google Sheets which worked great with the Excel file. I'm 58 years old. My AI3.0 age was 38, my Phenotypic age is 45.17 and my DNAage using a urine sample was 63! That last number is terrible and is in the >99 percentile. What the hell is with that? Something really wrong with my kidneys? All my lab work looks normal. 😲