
The Peter Attia Drive #357 ‒ A new era of longevity science: models of aging, human trials of rapamycin, biological clocks, promising compounds, and lifestyle interventions | Brian Kennedy, Ph.D.
886 snips
Jul 21, 2025 Brian Kennedy, a distinguished biologist and director of the Center for Healthy Longevity, shares groundbreaking insights on aging research. He discusses exciting human trials of rapamycin, revealing how dosing and lifestyle can influence outcomes. Kennedy presents two innovative aging models and critiques traditional biomarker limitations. He explores potential compounds like alpha-ketoglutarate and urolithin A, while emphasizing the crucial role of lifestyle interventions such as strength training in promoting healthspan and longevity.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Linear Damage and Exponential Mortality
- Aging appears to be driven by a linear accumulation of biological damage coupled with dynamic oscillations in health.
- These two components explain why mortality risk increases exponentially despite damage increasing linearly.
Rapamycin Timing and Exercise
- Brian Kennedy shares his personal experience that running within 24 hours of taking rapamycin results in poor performance.
- He finds that a few days post-dose, his training quality improves substantially.
Skepticism on Commercial Age Tests
- Commercial DNA methylation age tests vary widely in accuracy and repeatability.
- Controlled in-house measurement is essential for reliable biological age clock data.





