Top aging expert says these 4 FDA-approved drugs hold promise for extending life
“The evidence that we're looking for is from clinical trials, not if it cured an animal and not if people who took it told me that they're doing better,” says Dr. Nir Barzilai. · Fortune · Longevity Investors Conference / David Biedert

There’s not a cure-all drug to help us live longer.

Dr. Nir Barzilai, the director of the Institute for Aging Research at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine and board member at The American Federation for Aging Research (AFAR), predicts it will take a few decades to see impactful gerotherapeutics—drugs that counter the aging process—for the average person. The key is discovering safe and effective drugs that target mechanisms, like inflammation and cellular damage, that lead to aging.

“The evidence that we're looking for is from clinical trials, not if it cured an animal and not if people who took it told me that they're doing better,” he told Fortune at the Longevity Investors Conference last month in Gstaad, Switzerland. He says people must be careful not to give into false, baseless promotions of efficacy: “Many people are making decisions based on hope rather than on promise. If you hear something really exciting, say, ‘Okay, what's the data? Did you do a clinical study?’”

A successful gerotherapy, Barzilai says, will do four things:

  1. Target the hallmarks of aging

  2. Extend health span by reducing the risk of disease at the end of life

  3. Be tested for safety and efficacy on hundreds, possibly thousands of people in clinical trials

  4. Influence all-cause mortality

Geroscience has a long way to go, but there are four FDA-approved drugs that have shown promise to “target the process of aging,” Barzilai says. While not approved as anti-aging treatments, these drugs score the highest on his 12-point scale assessing their longevity potential.

“Some of those drugs have been decreasing hospitalization, death, and long COVID, making the point that although some of them are designed for diabetes, they affect immunity,” he said at a lecture at the Longevity Investors Conference. “They affect immunity, and, maybe, they affect the whole body’s ability to be resilient to a severe disease in the end.”

Here are the four:

GLP-1s 

Barzilai and other experts have pointed to GLP-1s (Ozempic, Wegovy), the wildly popular class of drugs targeting diabetes and obesity, as potential longevity boosters.

“It was developed for diabetes, and it was shown to actually decrease obesity,” says Barzilai, who adds there is evidence of a reduced risk of heart disease, kidney disease, Parkinson’s, and Alzheimer's. The drugs scored a 10 out of 12 on the gerotherapeutic scale. “It actually targets the mechanisms of aging.”

Dr. Douglas Vaughan, a professor of medicine at Northwestern University and director of the Potocsnak Longevity Institute, previously told Fortune that extensive research on animals has found calorie restriction to be the most effective way to extend life.