“The Achilles’ Heel ...”, indicates 10 to 20 uM concentrations of quercetin to be an effective range for clearing senescent cells without reducing the viability of healthy cells in vitro. The question remains of what dose of quercetin dihydrate might give those plasma concentrations in vivo. I looked at the following studies for guidance.
Low concentrations of flavonoids are protective in rat H4IIE cells whereas high concentrations cause DNA damage and apoptosis. states that quercetin and fisetin induced cytotoxicity, DNA strand breaks, oligonucleosomal DNA fragmentation, and caspase activation at concentrations between 50 and 250 micromol/L …. Published data on quercetin pharmacokinetics in humans suggest that a dietary supplement of 1-2 g of quercetin may result in plasma concentrations between 10 and 50 micromol/L.
What is inconsistent with the findings of this report is the fact that 800 mg doses of quercetin are commonly taken without clear changes in age spots, wrinkles or other senescent-related phenotypes. In my view, this study underestimates the required dosage.
Another study, Bioavailability and bioefficacy of polyphenols in humans. I. Review of 97 bioavailability studies and http://ajcn.nutrition.org/content/81/1/243S.full shows various measures of plasma concentrations from ingesting quercetin, which I convert to target therapeutic doses. It should be noted that that these studies showed a very high interindividual variability.
Published Long Term Daily Dose of Quercetin glucoside
Plasma Concentration
Target Concentration
Target Dose
8 mg
140 nM
15 uM
5240 mg
20 mg
220 nM
15 uM
3408 mg
50 mg
290 nM
15 uM
2586 mg
80 mg
630 nM
15 uM
1905 mg
1000 mg
1500 nM
15 uM
9750 mg
http://examine.com/supplements/Quercetin reports a study of supplementation of quercetin dihydrate at different levels, as shown below. Like other studies, there was high interindividual variability, with the largest dose being associated with a range of 240–1292 nM serum concentrations.
Published Long Term Daily Dose of Quercetin dihydrate
Plasma Concentration
Target Concentration
Target Dose
50 mg
92.2 nM
15 uM
8134 mg
100 mg
171.8 nM
15 uM
8731 mg
150 mg
316.2 nM
15 uM
7116 mg
Another reference point is from “The Achilles’ Heel …” which reported that a single dose of 50 mg / kg of quercetin is sufficient to cause apoptotic clearance of senescent cells in at least endothelial cells in mice. By simple math, the equivalent dosage in a 70 kg person is 3500 mg.
After the liver, quercetin exists in the blood solely as quercetin glucuronides. The elimination half life is reported to range from 20 t 24 hours .http://examine.com/supplements/Quercetin, http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0014579397013677, http://www.direct-ms.org/sites/default/files/Scalbert%20polyphenols%20AJCN.pdf
Quercetin has GRAS (Generally Recognized As Safe) status, and no side-effects have yet been noted in doses of a few grams a day in either humans or animals. http://examine.com/supplements/Quercetin
In my view, taking a 3.5 to 8 gm dose of quercetin dihydrate per day for two days appears to be a good starting point, particularly since there are no known side effects. Experimentation is needed to determine an effective dose. Unfortunately, I do not currently have metabolic markers or observable measures of the effects of quercetin.