Peter Attia & Huberman on Biological Age Testing
Your biological age tests might tell you you're 22, but let's be real - there's no way you can move like you did in your twenties. While these tests might be useful in distinguishing between someone who moves like they're 40 versus 90, the precision they claim is often misleading.
The Real Test
The gold standard for any biological aging test should be simple: what better predicts remaining years of life - chronological age or biological age? An actuary can make a decent prediction based on just three factors: age, sex, and smoking status. Measuring biological age accurately is far more complex than most realize.
Tracking Wellness
One practical approach is tracking your subjective wellness over time. Chart your energy levels, vigor, and overall wellbeing on a regular basis. Understanding what behaviors and interventions maintain your vitality becomes increasingly important as you age. If you're serious about longevity, maintaining metabolic health should be a priority.
The Numbers Game
When someone claims their biological age is 35 while being chronologically 60, we should ask - so what? The precision these tests claim is often false. Many biological markers are incredibly noisy - from triglyceride levels to epigenetic markers. DNA methylation testing might hold promise, but current commercial tests often fall short of true scientific rigor.
Perspective Matters
Consider radiation exposure: people worry about airport scanners, yet nuclear plant workers can be exposed to 10 times the recommended annual radiation limit without increased cancer risk. Similarly, we might be overthinking the precision of biological age testing while missing the bigger picture.
The truth is, these tests might be directionally useful, but their specific numbers shouldn't consume our focus. Instead, concentrate on the fundamentals: sleep, nutrition, exercise, and stress management. These factors will impact your biological age far more than obsessing over test results.