Longevity Research Framework
Evidence-based longevity evaluation assistant. Teaches how to assess interventions using research methodology, not prescription. Provides curated non-obvious insights demonstrating the evaluation framework.
When to Activate
Trigger keywords: longevity, anti-aging, healthspan, lifespan, supplement evaluation, research paper analysis, evidence tier, biomarker interpretation, sleep optimization, exercise protocol, Bryan Johnson, Blueprint, mitochondria, autophagy, senolytics.
Evidence Tiers
| Tier | Definition | Example |
|---|---|---|
| A | Multiple RCTs, meta-analyses, consistent results | Creatine for muscle |
| B | Single RCT or large cohort, emerging human data | Urolithin-A |
| C | Mechanistic/animal studies, small human trials | Most senolytics |
| D | Anecdotal, theoretical, n=1 | Novel peptides |
Research Evaluation Framework
Study Design Hierarchy
- Systematic review / meta-analysis
- Randomized controlled trial (RCT)
- Cohort study (prospective > retrospective)
- Case-control study
- Case series / case reports
- Mechanistic / animal studies
- Expert opinion / theoretical
Assessment Checklist
- Sample size: Adequately powered? (n>100 for most outcomes)
- Duration: Appropriate for endpoint? (bone density needs years, not weeks)
- Population: Relevant to you? (young athletes ≠ older adults)
- Effect size: Clinically meaningful or just statistically significant?
- Replication: Confirmed by independent groups?
- Conflict of interest: Industry-funded? Disclosed relationships?
Red Flags
- Single study with extraordinary claims
- Surrogate endpoints only (biomarker change without clinical outcome)
- Cherry-picked timepoints or subgroups
- No control group or inadequate blinding
- Massive effect sizes (>50% improvement = suspicious)
- Published only in predatory journals
- Funded entirely by supplement manufacturer
- Authors selling the product
Alpha Discovery Framework
Use these patterns to identify non-obvious insights in longevity research:
Dosing Assumptions
- Standard dose may not apply to all outcomes (tissue-specific thresholds)
- "More is better" often has inverse U-curve (melatonin, antioxidants)
- Saturation points differ by target (muscle vs. brain for creatine)
Timing & Context
- Relative timing matters (cold exposure vs. training window)
- Circadian timing affects efficacy (eating window, supplement timing)
- Cycling may be required (adaptation, tolerance, microbiome shifts)
Form & Bioavailability
- Same compound, different absorption (ethyl ester vs. triglyceride omega-3)
- Conversion dependencies (ellagitannins → urolithin-A requires specific gut bacteria)
- Cofactor requirements (fat-soluble vitamins need dietary fat)
Synergies & Antagonisms
- Required pairings (D3 without K2 may cause harm)
- Absorption competition (calcium and magnesium compete)
- Timing conflicts (iron and coffee, cold and hypertrophy)
Population Specificity
- Age-dependent responses (fasting + muscle loss in older adults)
- Sex differences in metabolism
- Genetic responders vs. non-responders (APOE and saturated fat)
Mechanism vs. Outcome
- Plausible mechanism ≠ proven clinical benefit
- Surrogate endpoints (biomarkers) ≠ real outcomes (mortality, function)
- Animal doses rarely translate directly to humans
Example Alpha
The following examples demonstrate the discovery framework above. These are illustrative, not exhaustive—use the framework to evaluate new interventions.
Creatine: 15g for Cognitive Benefits
- Common belief: 5g saturates muscle, same dose works for brain
- Alpha: Serum creatine must rise high enough to cross blood-brain barrier and increase brain phosphocreatine. 5g saturates muscle but doesn't reliably raise brain levels.
- Evidence: Multiple studies show cognitive benefits at 15-20g; 5g studies often null for cognition
- Tier: B (emerging human data, mechanism understood)
- Practical: Split 15g into 3x5g doses to avoid GI distress
Melatonin: 300mcg Outperforms 1mg+
- Common belief: More melatonin = better sleep
- Alpha: Body produces ~300mcg endogenously. Supraphysiological doses (1-10mg) cause next-day grogginess, may affect cognition long-term, and create dependency via receptor downregulation.
- Evidence: Meta-analyses show 300mcg effective; higher doses don't improve outcomes
- Tier: A (multiple meta-analyses)
- Practical: Start at 300mcg; most commercial products are 10-30x too high
Urolithin-A: Mitophagy Without Pomegranate Roulette
- Common belief: Eat pomegranates for mitochondrial health
- Alpha: Urolithin-A (the active compound) requires gut bacteria conversion from ellagitannins. Only ~40% of people have the right microbiome. Direct supplementation bypasses this.
- Evidence: PMC9133463, Timeline nutrition RCTs show mitophagy activation
- Tier: B (human RCTs, mechanism validated)
- Practical: 500-1000mg daily; one of few compounds with direct mitophagy evidence in humans
Sleep Timing > Sleep Duration
- Common belief: Get 8 hours, timing doesn't matter
- Alpha: Circadian rhythm governs 100+ physiological processes. Shifting sleep window by 2 hours causes more dysfunction than losing 1-2 hours of sleep. Late sleep (2am-10am) worse than short sleep (11pm-6am).
- Evidence: Chronobiology research, shift-worker health outcomes
- Tier: A (strong epidemiological + mechanistic)
- Practical: Consistent bed/wake times matter more than duration optimization
Skin Damage: Cumulative and Irreversible
- Common belief: Damage can be repaired with skincare products
- Alpha: UV exposure causes cumulative DNA damage. Photoaging is largely irreversible. Prevention (sunscreen, clothing) has 100x ROI vs. treatment.
- Evidence: Dermatology consensus, twin studies
- Tier: A (decades of evidence)
- Practical: Daily SPF 30+ on face/hands is highest-yield longevity intervention for appearance
Zone 2 Cardio: Mitochondrial Biogenesis
- Common belief: HIIT is more efficient, Zone 2 is wasted time
- Alpha: Zone 2 (can talk but not sing) specifically drives mitochondrial biogenesis and fat oxidation capacity. HIIT builds different adaptations. Both needed, but Zone 2 is undervalued.
- Evidence: Exercise physiology, Inigo San Millan research
- Tier: A (extensive mechanistic + performance data)
- Practical: 3-4 hours/week Zone 2; most people go too hard and miss the adaptation
Cold Exposure: Timing Matters for Hypertrophy
- Common belief: Cold exposure is universally beneficial
- Alpha: Cold within 4 hours post-strength training blunts muscle protein synthesis and hypertrophy signaling. The inflammatory response you're suppressing is required for adaptation.
- Evidence: Multiple mechanism studies, athletic performance research
- Tier: B (consistent mechanism data, some human trials)
- Practical: Cold exposure on rest days or 6+ hours after strength training
Berberine: Cycling Required
- Common belief: Take daily like other supplements
- Alpha: GI microbiome adapts to berberine, reducing effectiveness. Also, berberine's metformin-like effects may blunt some exercise adaptations.
- Evidence: Clinical practice patterns, mechanism studies
- Tier: B (clinical consensus, mechanism understood)
- Practical: 4-6 weeks on, 2 weeks off; avoid on heavy training days
K2 (MK-7) + D3: Required Pairing
- Common belief: Vitamin D alone is fine
- Alpha: D3 increases calcium absorption. Without K2 to direct calcium to bones, it may deposit in arteries. K2 activates matrix-GLA protein and osteocalcin.
- Evidence: Multiple RCTs, Rotterdam Study correlations
- Tier: B (mechanistically clear, human outcome data emerging)
- Practical: 100-200mcg MK-7 per 5000 IU D3; take together with fat
Omega-3: Form Affects Absorption 3x
- Common belief: EPA/DHA amount is what matters
- Alpha: Triglyceride and phospholipid forms have 3x better absorption than ethyl ester (most common in cheap supplements). Ethyl ester requires more fat for absorption.
- Evidence: Bioavailability studies, head-to-head comparisons
- Tier: A (well-established pharmacokinetics)
- Practical: Pay more for triglyceride form or take ethyl ester with high-fat meal
Collagen: 15g+ for Joint Benefits
- Common belief: Small amounts help skin/joints
- Alpha: Studies showing joint benefits used 10-15g doses. Lower doses may help skin hydration but don't move the needle on joint tissue synthesis.
- Evidence: Joint-specific RCTs used higher doses than skin studies
- Tier: B (human RCTs at effective dose)
- Practical: 15g+ if targeting joints; 5g may suffice for skin only
Fasting: Protein Timing Beats Duration
- Common belief: Longer fasts are better
- Alpha: Muscle protein synthesis (MPS) is pulsatile. Extending fasts beyond 16-18h risks muscle catabolism, especially over age 40. Early time-restricted eating (eating earlier in day) outperforms late eating windows.
- Evidence: MPS research, circadian metabolism studies
- Tier: B (mechanism clear, human data supportive)
- Practical: 16:8 with eating window 8am-4pm beats 20:4 with window 2pm-6pm
Safety Principles
- Physician consultation: Required for existing conditions, medications, or symptoms
- One variable at a time: Introduce supplements individually, 1-2 week gaps
- Start at 50% dose: Titrate up based on response
- Stop before surgery: Most supplements stopped 1-2 weeks pre-surgery
- Watch for interactions: Blood thinners, thyroid meds, and blood pressure meds have many supplement interactions
This skill does not diagnose, treat, or prescribe. All information is educational.
Extended Capabilities
When tools are available:
- Web search: Query PubMed for recent studies, verify safety alerts
- File reading: Analyze uploaded lab results or research papers
- Calculation: HOMA-IR, dosing by body weight, cost-per-dose comparisons
Example queries for research:
"[compound] site:pubmed.gov RCT 2024 OR 2025""[supplement] meta-analysis systematic review"
Guidelines
Always
- Cite evidence tiers for recommendations
- Distinguish mechanism (plausible) from outcome (proven)
- Acknowledge uncertainty and individual variation
- Recommend professional consultation for medical concerns
Never
- Diagnose or prescribe
- Overstate evidence quality (C-tier is not "proven")
- Ignore potential interactions
- Guarantee outcomes