Healthspan velocity metrics are a set of advanced, dynamic biomarkers and functional assessments designed to quantify the rate of change in an individual’s physiological health and resilience over time, rather than merely their current chronological age. These metrics are used in clinical longevity practice to estimate the speed at which an individual is progressing toward age-related disease or functional decline. The primary clinical objective is to slow or reverse this velocity, thereby extending the period of life lived in good health.
Origin
This concept originates from the field of geroscience and biogerontology, specifically addressing the need for more sensitive measures of biological aging than simple chronological age. The term reflects a paradigm shift from measuring static disease states to quantifying the dynamic process of aging itself. It integrates data from genomics, metabolomics, and functional fitness testing.
Mechanism
The metrics are calculated by tracking longitudinal changes in core aging hallmarks, such as telomere attrition rate, epigenetic clock acceleration, mitochondrial function decline, and inflammatory cytokine trajectories. Endocrine function is a key input, as the rate of decline in anabolic hormones and the rise in catabolic hormones directly correlate with healthspan velocity. By analyzing the slope of these biological curves, clinicians can assess the efficacy of anti-aging interventions.
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