Metformin once again fails to live up to hopes, as it did once before ((1), and this post on the previous competent metformin lifespan study), tho' this new disappointment is not as severe.
I had been told some time ago that Rafal de Cabo and colleagues had gotten life extension out of their lower dose of metformin, and assumed that this meant something at least as impressive as rapamycin (which, unlike metformin, is pretty grossly toxic and self-evidently inappropriate for self-experimentation). I went to various online pharmacies several times, gazing indecisively at the proferred pills of uncertain provenance, and almost bought the stuff, generally pulling back because I hadn't seen the results, and because of the obvious possibility that a person already on CR might already be maxing out these pathways (tho' I thought this not very likely, since humans are clearly not as eat-your-young hungry as mice on 40% CR are), or that people on CR might be put at risk by doing so (eg, by inhibiting gluconeogenesis when we have no other source of energy, leading to a hypoglycemic crisis (tho' these are not reported for diabetics on metformin)). I also considered buying a bunch just in case there was a rush on the stuff when the study came out.
I guessed I should'a realized when one of the authors told me that it was coming out in Nature Communications and not Nature that the result wasn't going to be earth-shattering.
This (2) really isn't much of anything: they got a 4-6% increase in MEAN LS depending on the mouse strain, and no increase in max; moreover, "male mice treated with 0.1% metformin in both longevity studies did not show any major difference in pathologies at 115 weeks of age nor obvious causes of death in the necropsies compared with SD-fed animals."
Based on two different allometric scaling methods and some reasonable-seeming assumptions about body weight and food intake that turned out to be pretty damned good guesses, I'd calculated that the 'low-dose' Met that got life extension (0.1% of diet) was significantly lower than a standard starter dose for diabetics (and thus probably low-risk). Yet say that even the 'low-dose' metformin "yielded a concentration of 0.45±0.09 mM in serum and 0.49±0.06 nmoles mg−1 protein in the liver ... which is considerably higher than seen in the serum of diabetic patients treated with metformin [my emphasis]". Granted that high-dose metformin shortened life, it's not at all clear to me what rational basis one would have for determining a dose for self-experimentation.
"Treatment with metformin mimics some of the benefits of calorie restriction, such as improved physical performance, increased insulin sensitivity, and reduced low-density lipoprotein and cholesterol levels without a decrease in caloric intake." I think I'll keep eating healthily and exercising, and wait for something a bit less trivial.
References
1: Smith DL Jr, Elam CF Jr, Mattison JA, Lane MA, Roth GS, Ingram DK, Allison DB.
Metformin supplementation and life span in Fischer-344 rats. J Gerontol A Biol
Sci Med Sci. 2010 May;65(5):468-74. doi: 10.1093/gerona/glq033. Epub 2010 Mar 19.
PubMed PMID: 20304770; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC2854888.
http://www.ncbi.nlm....les/PMC2854888/
2. Alejandro Martin-Montalvo, Evi M. Mercken, Sarah J. Mitchell, Hector H. Palacios, Patricia L. Mote, Morten Scheibye-Knudsen, Ana P. Gomes, Theresa M. Ward, Robin K. Minor, Marie-José Blouin, Matthias Schwab, Michael Pollak, Yongqing Zhang, Yinbing Yu, Kevin G. Becker, Vilhelm A. Bohr, Donald K. Ingram, David A. Sinclair, Norman S. Wolf, Stephen R. Spindler, Michel Bernier & Rafael de Cabo
Metformin improves healthspan and lifespan in mice
Nature Communications 4, Article number: 2192
doi:10.1038/ncomms3192
http://www.nature.co...ncomms3192.html
Published 30 July 2013
PMID 23900241
Edited by Michael, 07 February 2014 - 08:05 PM.