Authors
Mahdi Moqri, Chiara Herzog, Jesse R Poganik, Kejun Ying, Jamie N Justice, Daniel W Belsky, Albert T Higgins-Chen, Brian H Chen, Alan A Cohen, Georg Fuellen, Sara Hägg, Riccardo E Marioni, Martin Widschwendter, Kristen Fortney, Peter O Fedichev, Alex Zhavoronkov, Nir Barzilai, Jessica Lasky-Su, Douglas P Kiel, Brian K Kennedy, Steven Cummings, P Eline Slagboom, Eric Verdin, Andrea B Maier, Vittorio Sebastiano, Michael P Snyder, Vadim N Gladyshev, Steve Horvath, Luigi Ferrucci
Publication date
2024/2
Source
Nature medicine
Volume
30
Issue
2
Pages
360-372
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group US
Description
The search for biomarkers that quantify biological aging (particularly ‘omic’-based biomarkers) has intensified in recent years. Such biomarkers could predict aging-related outcomes and could serve as surrogate endpoints for the evaluation of interventions promoting healthy aging and longevity. However, no consensus exists on how biomarkers of aging should be validated before their translation to the clinic. Here, we review current efforts to evaluate the predictive validity of omic biomarkers of aging in population studies, discuss challenges in comparability and generalizability and provide recommendations to facilitate future validation of biomarkers of aging. Finally, we discuss how systematic validation can accelerate clinical translation of biomarkers of aging and their use in gerotherapeutic clinical trials.
Total citations
Scholar articles
M Moqri, C Herzog, JR Poganik, K Ying, JN Justice… - Nature medicine, 2024