Prognosis
By how "youthful" they are.
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Hi, it’s Michelle in New York. If, like me, you love being told you have an “old soul,” you may want to reconsider. Having a “youthful brain” may actually help you live longer. More on that in a moment, but first … 

Today’s must-reads

  • J&J shrugged off Trump’s latest tariff threat and boosted its outlook for 2025.

  • There was a shakeup at HHS, where RFK Jr. replaced his chief of staff after six months.

  • Senate Republicans agree to spare funds to fight HIV and AIDS.

It's in your head

Your brain could very well be the gatekeeper of a long life. 

Having a “youthful” brain and immune system predicts a longer lifespan, researchers at Stanford Medicine found, while having an “aged” brain is linked to earlier death. In fact, it increases mortality risk by more than 180%, they say.

But what separates an old brain from a young brain? 

To calculate the biological age of a person’s brain — and other organs — the scientists took blood samples and isolated about 3,000 proteins that stem from individual organs and change with age.

More than 44,000 people took part, with doctors cross-referencing medical records from the UK Biobank with changes in each person’s protein levels over time. Comparing individual results to the average among people in the same age group, they determined whose organs seemed to be aging rapidly and whose were holding onto their youth. The top fifth percentile were dubbed extreme agers.

The findings point to the brain and immune system as the main control centers for longevity, lead author Hamilton Oh says. One possible reason is that the brain’s in charge of critical factors involved in aging — like blood pressure, energy levels, stress and the circadian rhythm. 

The researchers also predicted people’s risk for organ-specific diseases like heart failure, kidney disease and Alzheimer’s disease based on the “age” of those related organs. Having an “old” brain tripled the risk of Alzheimer’s, while aged kidneys and livers were tied to chronic conditions that hinder their function.

The study, published in the journal Nature Medicine, should help direct what medical interventions people need for each organ to help lengthen longevity, Oh says, and could lead to new therapies.

Until then, there are steps people can take to keep their organs young in hopes of extending their lives, the researchers say. Healthy habits like a nutritious diet and vigorous exercise were givens. In addition, they identified six products — Premarin, ibuprofen, glucosamine supplements, cod liver oil, multivitamins and vitamin C — that were associated with more youthful organs.

Unsurprisingly, bad-for-you behaviors like smoking, drinking and a lack of sleep accelerated aging across organ systems.

Tony Wyss-Coray, a Stanford professor and the study’s senior author, said he plans to commercialize the process the researchers used. It could be available to the public within two to three years, he says.

Even better methods will emerge later as machine learning models improve and home in on a reliable set of proteins, Oh says. Then “they’ll have real clinical utility.” — Michelle Amponsah

The big story

Hims & Hers Health Inc. launched in 2017 as an Instagram-inspired telehealth startup, offering generic Viagra and Rogaine for guys too chagrined to seek in-person medical help for their hairline or bedroom performance.

In true Silicon Valley fashion, Hims pivoted whenever possible to the next hot area. For now, that’s the blistering GLP-1 weight-loss-drug market. Bloomberg’s Madison Muller and Devin Leonard lay out how Hims isn’t letting go in its fight with Big Pharma, even as the entire industry is shifting underfoot.

What we’re reading

Reinstated CDC officials say they have “no idea” why they were brought back, Bloomberg’s Emma Court reports.

A million veterans donated their DNA for health research, and scientists are worried it’s going to waste, KFF Health News reports.

Silicon Valley startups are racing to be the first to sequence an embryo's entire genome in order to breed super-babies, the Washington Post reports.

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