
#63 The Million Dollar Question: Which Health Predictions Actually Help You Live Longer?
Live Long and Well with Dr. Bobby
Biologic Age Clocks: Concept and Hype
Bobby outlines the premise behind biologic clocks and warns marketing exceeds the underlying science.
Can you predict when “bad things” will happen to your health—and more importantly, can you do anything about it? In this episode, I break down which prediction tools actually help you live long and well (because you can act on them), and which ones are mostly expensive fortune-telling. Joined by cardiologist Dr. Anthony Pearson (author of The Skeptical Cardiologist), we dig into heart-risk calculators, dementia genetics, and why biological age clocks aren’t ready for prime time.
Guest: Dr. Anthony Pearson, cardiologist and writer of The Skeptical Cardiologist (Substack)
Key topics & takeaways
- Why “prediction” only matters if it changes what you do—and improves real outcomes.
- A red flag to watch for: is the person promoting the tool also selling the test, supplements, or “hacks” to fix it?
- A sobering reality check: even doctors’ YouTube claims often lack strong evidence (and the least evidence-based content gets more views).
- Heart disease risk equations: the gold standard in prediction because we can reduce risk factors (BP, LDL/ApoB, smoking, diabetes) and clinical trials show outcomes improve.
- But even good tools miss people: a study of <65-year-olds who had heart attacks found many were labeled “low risk” beforehand.
- Dementia genetics (ApoE): ApoE4 raises risk (especially E4/E4), but it’s not destiny. You can’t change genes—so the value of testing depends on whether it motivates healthy behaviors or creates anxiety.
- Biological age clocks: fascinating research, messy consumer product. Different tests disagree, repeat testing can vary wildly, and most importantly—no proof that “lowering” a clock improves health outcomes or longevity. My advice: save your money (for now).
Links & resources mentioned
- Wall Street Journal: longevity calculators for retirement planning: https://www.wsj.com/personal-finance/retirement/i-tried-answering-a-big-unknown-in-retirement-planning-how-long-will-i-live-9ef468df
- Evidence behind doctors’ YouTube claims (JAMA Network Open): https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2844038
- Example of strong claims vs broader evidence debate (Substack): https://substack.com/@drjasonfung1/p-182794806
- Framingham Heart Study overview (risk factors history): https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4159698/
- Heart-attack patients labeled “low risk” by calculators (JACC Advances): https://www.jacc.org/doi/10.1016/j.jacadv.2025.102361
- Biological age clock reliability issues (comparison across clocks): https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9586209/
Call to action
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