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Anti-Aging Therapy: Separating the Wheat from the Chaff

  Few terms in contemporary medicine carry more weight and less precision than " anti-aging ." It appears on laboratory publications and lipstick packaging with equal confidence. It is invoked by Nobel Prize winners and infomercial hosts within the same news cycle. It promises everything and, when examined carefully, has so far delivered far less than its advocates claim. The source of this confusion is not difficult to locate. Anti-aging means genuinely different things to three genuinely different communities — science, medicine, and commerce — and these three communities have been talking past each other, and at the public, for more than two decades. Before any honest evaluation of anti-aging therapy is possible, the definitions must be separated, their evidence bases assessed independently, and their boundaries mapped with precision. What Medicine Already Had The oldest, most established, and most clinically practiced definition belongs to the medical community. In medic...

ER-100 and the Sequence That Matters: Wellspan First, Longevity After

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   When Life Biosciences announced in January 2026 that the FDA had cleared its IND application for ER-100 — the first cellular rejuvenation therapy using partial epigenetic reprogramming to enter human clinical trials — the longevity field responded with considerable excitement. David Sinclair , whose Harvard laboratory originated the foundational science, described the moment as potential evidence that the biological mechanisms of cellular aging are reversible. That specific claim — at the cellular level — is scientifically grounded and supported by decades of evidence, from Yamanaka's Nobel Prize-winning demonstration that adult cells can be reprogrammed to a pluripotent state, to Sinclair's own work showing that epigenetic information lost during aging can be partially restored. Cellular reversibility of aging is real. It is demonstrated. It is not in serious dispute. What requires far more careful examination is the distance between that cellular fact and the broade...

The Beginning: The Uninvited Dean: How a Phone Call Changed Everything

It really was the beginning, and it almost happened like this. I came home from a business trip exhausted, the kind of tiredness that settles into the bones before the coat is even off. At the time, I held a demanding post at the Kharkiv Research Institute of Microbiology and Immunology — deputy director for scientific work and head of the clinic. My wife met me at the door with the quiet certainty of someone delivering news that cannot wait: a Professor V. Lemeshko from the University had been looking for me and would call. Lemeshko. I turned the name over in my mind like a coin of uncertain denomination. Then it came back — a reception at the Kharkiv Research Institute of Therapy, where I had served as deputy director. The academician L. Malaya had introduced him with ceremony:  a scientist of world renown . I remembered thinking, not without irony, that many scientists in our country carry that title while science quietly recedes into the wallpaper. Our paths had never crosse...

Biological Age and Calendar Age: Two Clocks, One Life

  Every human life is measured by two distinct clocks running simultaneously, and they rarely agree. The first is the  calendar clock  — the astronomical scale of our planet, indifferent to the individual, counting days and years with absolute regularity. By this clock, everyone born on the same date is exactly the same age. It is the age on a passport, a birthday cake, a medical intake form. The calendar clock does not know your name. It does not know what you have survived, what you have built, or what you still intend to do. It simply counts. The second is the  biological clock  — the deeply personal expression of an individual's genetic program, unfolding from the first inhale to the last exhale in constant dialogue with the environment. This clock does not tick at a fixed rate. It accelerates and decelerates in response to lived experience. It responds to what we eat, how we move, who we love, what we fear, and what we endure. Two people of identical calend...