Health
Cellular Rejuvenation Has the Potential to Reverse Aging
Early this year, I attended a longevity science conference in Miami hosted by the academy that Sinclair helped found. That weekend, about 65 scientists from around the world compared notes and waited in line for coffee and complained about the weather in the city, which was experiencing a freakish cold snap. Iguanas, stunned by the below-freezing temperatures, were falling from the sky, tumbling from their perches in trees and littering the sidewalks. Scientists wearing Oura rings and Apple watches skirted the tropical reptiles as they tried to get their 10,000 steps or maximize their high-intensity interval training. Others snapped photos to send to friends who were zoologists: Were the iguanas done for? Or might they be revived?
Becoming a member of the academy is an honor for longevity scientists, and protecting the group’s reputation was on the agenda for the first day of discussion. Its leaders had come to believe that they had a P.R. problem, as groundbreaking research like cellular rejuvenation gets mixed up, in the public’s mind, with businesses selling unproven supplements and billionaires like Bryan Johnson grabbing headlines by infusing himself with his son’s blood. “There are too many terms, too little clarity, mixed messaging, public confusion and so on,” Nir Barzilai, a professor at the Albert Einstein School of Medicine and the academy’s president, told the crowd.
Barzilai, who is known for his work exploring longevity genes in centenarians, went on to introduce a branding consultant he hired, who warned the group that there was a misalignment between the work they were doing and “the fringe anti-aging approaches” and the “snake oil” that did the field harm. After some debate, the group voted to rebrand itself the Academy of Geroscience — the name the consultant recommended. (“Geroscience” literally means “the science of aging.”) Ringel, the Life Biosciences executive, seemed undecided about the name — he wasn’t sure it captured the great potential of the field to transform the human life span.
The conference showcased the debate that longevity researchers — or geroscientists — are having about how to set expectations for the public. Until he joined Altos, Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte, like Sinclair, had been known to make grand proclamations about just how much life extension we could anticipate and how soon: In 2019, Izpisua Belmonte told MIT Technology Review that he believed there was probably already an individual born who would live to be 130; humans, he said, might eventually live 50 years beyond our current life span.
By contrast, Barron, the Altos chief executive, shies away from that sort of prediction. He fears that others in the field are raising expectations so high that the public might not recognize a miracle of progress when it occurs. Even if we cured all cancer tomorrow, Barron said, we’d add maybe only two or three years to the average American’s life span. “So if we extend health span by three years,” he said, “you’re doing the equivalent of something which will not happen anytime soon, which is curing cancer.” Should Altos manage to add five years to life expectancy — more than Barron even could hope for, he said — he feared that the public would still be disappointed. “Even delaying ovarian aging by three years or Alzheimer’s by three years — that would be transformative,” he said.
Health
Bacteria in your mouth may travel to the gut and trigger stomach cancer, research finds
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New research is suggesting a strong association between mouth bacteria and gastric cancer.
The study, published in the journal Cell Reports Medicine, examined the gut microbiome in stool and the oral microbiome from saliva and the tongue.
The China-based researchers with BGI Genomics analyzed 404 samples from Chinese patients with gastric cancer in one group and chronic gastritis in another.
DEATHS FROM ONE TYPE OF CANCER ARE SURGING AMONG YOUNG ADULTS WITHOUT COLLEGE DEGREES
Gut microbes were different in gastric cancer, the researchers found, unveiling 28 varying gut species.
Most were oral bacteria, including Streptococcus — bacteria that can sometimes cause strep throat — lactobacillus and other lactic acid bacteria.
The study found oral bacteria in gastric cancer patients matched gut bacteria, suggesting transmission. (iStock)
Twenty oral-gut species were found in both saliva and stool and were more common in the gut of gastric cancer patients.
The findings suggest the transmission of these bacteria from mouth to gut, after finding that the oral bacteria matched closely to the gut bacteria in the same person, according to genetic comparisons.
The researchers suggest that saliva and stool samples could help indicate patterns that are linked to stomach cancer, although more research is required before testing is ready for clinical use.
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“Collectively, these findings underscore the critical role of the oral-gut microbiome axis in [gastric cancer],” the researchers concluded in the study publication.
Since this is a cross-sectional analysis, the results cannot prove that these bacteria cause cancer, but they do suggest a strong association.
The new study results cannot prove that these bacteria cause cancer — but the results do suggest a strong association, the researchers said. (iStock)
Dr. Brian Slomovitz, director of gynecologic oncology and co-chair of the Cancer Research Committee at Mount Sinai Medical Center in Miami Beach, Florida, talked about the “initiator-promoter” model of this study in an interview with Fox News Digital.
“[The study] demonstrates how the microbiome of one area of the body can migrate and affect the ability of cancers to develop in another part of the body,” said Slomovitz, who was not involved in the new study.
“It is very important that we work toward a healthy microbiome in the gut to decrease the risk of inflammation and cancer.”
“The initiator in gastric cancers is usually inflammatory, such as H.pylori infection,” he continued.
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“This inflammation leads to damaged mucosal cells where the lactic acid-producing bacteria can colonize. This helps to explain why cancers still develop even after treating H. pylori infection.”
The new findings could be applied to using the saliva for early cancer detection, Slomovitz suggested, which may help identify the disease even in pre-cancer states.
“There is a correlation between the bacteria found in the gut and neurogenerative disease and increased cancer risk,” said a top physician.
“Perhaps we will learn that by altering the microbiome, we can help better treat cancers (in combination with immunotherapy or chemotherapy) or even prevent cancer,” he said.
“These results will build a foundation for future research. However, we are not ready to incorporate this into clinical practice.”
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Fox News senior medical analyst Dr. Marc Siegel also weighed in separately on the study, noting that awareness around the importance of the gut microbiome on overall health has been growing.
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“There is a correlation between the bacteria found in the gut and neurogenerative disease and increased cancer risk,” he told Fox News Digital.
“It is very important that we work toward a healthy microbiome in the gut to decrease the risk of inflammation and cancer.”
Health
Highly contagious stomach bug surges in US as some groups face severe effects
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Top stories
→ Highly contagious stomach bug spreads fast, hitting certain patients hardest
→ Woman’s longtime vaping habit leads to terminal lung cancer
→ Your favorite snacks could be quietly wrecking your knees, research suggests
A highly contagious digestive virus is surging across the U.S., experts warn. (iStock)
Interview of the week
→ Plastic surgeon Dr. Sheila Nazarian speaks about the risks of traveling to other countries for plastic surgery procedures
Metabolic health
→ Natural hormone may reduce obesity without cutting calories
→ Common sweetener may trigger fat buildup in ways experts didn’t expect
→ Common eating habit may trigger premature immune system aging
Researchers concluded that fructose acts as a “metabolic signal that promotes fat production and storage in ways that differ fundamentally from glucose.” (iStock)
Conversation starters
→ ‘Nonnamaxxing’ trend may improve mental and physical health
→ Psychedelic therapy may be coming to your doctor’s office as questions swirl
→ Intermittent fasting’s real benefit may come after you start eating again
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Health
Video: Skyrocketing Health Insurance Forces Americans to Scramble for Care
“When I saw the termination notice come in, it was kind of nerve-wracking.” James Digilio is 62 years old. He couldn’t pay for his health insurance after costs skyrocketed. “I was paying, last year, $57-a-month premium. And then it jumped up this year to $1,690 a month. When I first saw it, I was surprised. I thought this was a mistake.” Millions of people like James saw their insurance premiums soar in January after the Senate deadlocked on competing proposals, leaving the expanded tax subsidies to expire. James relies on medication to manage his blood pressure, cholesterol and diabetes. Since losing his insurance, he started rationing his medication. “I was concerned about the medications, not knowing how I was going to refill them. I figure if I could stretch it out and not take them for a week or so, then that’s another week I could tack on that I could still stretch it out to.” James works at a pizza restaurant, making $14 an hour washing dishes and delivering food — that brings in, on average, $1,200 a month plus tips. He says that the $1,690 health insurance payment would eat up all the income from his job. “It would have been very hard to manage to pay that much premium for health insurance.” He takes care of his sister, who is currently unemployed. In January, to cover their expenses, James took out his Social Security retirement benefits early. If he had paid for his new health insurance premium on top of the other expenses, that would have left him nearly $1,400 in debt at the end of each month. For years, Florida has been leading the nation in Affordable Care Act enrollment. One in five residents are enrolled in an A.C.A. plan, compared to one in 15 nationwide, and 98 percent of Florida’s enrollees relied on federal financial assistance to pay for a plan. Now, many are facing a future without health insurance. More than a million people nationwide have dropped their coverage since the A.C.A. subsidies expired. Today, with only a week and a half of medication left, James is visiting a free clinic nearby to see if they have the medications he needs. “OK, if you just take a seat and I’ll tell the nurse you’re here.” “Jimmy’s case is not unique. All of our new patients who had insurance and now do not have insurance have all seen tremendous increase in their monthly premiums to the point that they can’t afford them any longer.” Terri Belletto runs this volunteer-based clinic in Bunnell, a city in northeast Florida. It relies on private donations and grants for its funding. She says her clinic has seen a surge in patients over the past three months. “This is the largest increase in patients that we’ve seen in the 12 years that I’ve been here. If we’re not in crisis mode in health care in the United States, we’re almost there.” “So was it two months from now, you said?” For James, a measure of relief. Today, the clinic refilled over a month of medication for free. The clinic may have met his immediate health care needs, but what worries James is where to go for anything more serious and how he’d pay for it. “If I had affordable health care, my life would be easier. It would be more relaxed and I could not have to be stressed about the insurance and hopefully also medications.”
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