Legitimate bio-marker testing is important to our community to help determine what current approaches are the best for slowing aging
It is 2018, and I can't believe how many anecdotal placebo-driven reports populate the LongeCity forum. Here is one egregious recent example if you want to chuckle: http://www.longecity...-human-history/
There was a budgeted effort to promote legitimate bio-marker testing last year, but it required members to pay for their first test, before embarking on an anti-aging regimen, where at the conclusion of the regimen time period, LongeCity would pay for a second test.
I am proposing a simpler approach. Here is the outline:
1. LongeCity pays for a standard aging-biomarker test. The most cost effective, easy to implement, and robust test available today is probably DNA methylation. LongeCity has a current relationship with Osiris Green and their test is the cheapest on the market, however, the standard deviation on their test is +/- 5 years. I have spoken with ZYMO and they will offer their test "at cost" for an effort such as this. ZYMO is HIPPA compliant and their standard deviation is only +/- 1.7 years.
2. We aim to offer this as a member benefit and to engage other communities such as the calorie restriction society.
3. Test subjects can opt to remain anonymous.
4. A simple questionnaire accompanies each test. This would ask each subject to rank their general approaches to life extension. Supplements, Diet, Exercise, Other. Depending upon the response, we could drill down further into regimens, but I would want to keep it simple at first to ensure a larger response.
5. We aim to complete the study before the end of Summer 2018, and present findings at RAADFest in September.
6. Stretch goal: Have a small number of people do DNA methylation testing at 3 different times of day. It is currently unknown if there is inter-day variability in DNA methylation.
7. Perhaps work in conjunction with newly formed OpenCures to complete and promote the study.
8. If successful, continue with testing on an annual or semi-annual basis. preferably with the same study participants.
Drawbacks/Objections
1. There are already a lot of groups (example: patients like me) that share test data, and there are many studies involving aging bio-markers. However, I am unsure that there are any studies that have easily accessible data AND focus upon longevity activists.
2. It is unlikely that a small study of a few dozen people will produce statistically valid results. To me, that is okay. We WILL learn something and I am certain there will be incredible marketing and community-building opportunities with such a study.
3. Cost. 5-10K, maybe higher if we can get some other groups to promote the study or if we can use other crowd-funding platforms. With 10K we could test between 50 and 75 people.
Leadership: I would be lead organizer and promoter.
LongeCity certainly has the budget for such a study and has enough connections to get a good number of people involved. LongeCity has not done much of consequence as of late. This could be a solid effort to help the community, not only functionally (what regimens work), but also as a promotional effort (life-extensionists are younger and healthier).
Legitimate bio-marker testing is important to our community to help determine what current approaches are the best for slowing aging