Affiliation:
1. Intramural Research Program of the National Institute on Aging, NIH Baltimore Maryland USA
2. Biomedical Research Institute, Faculty of Medicine and Life Sciences Hasselt University Diepenbeek Belgium
3. Department of Medicine Harvard Medical School Boston Massachusetts USA
Abstract
AbstractGeroscience poses that core biological mechanisms of aging contribute to chronic diseases and disabilities in late life and that health span and longevity can be modulated by pharmacological and behavioral interventions. Despite strong evidence from studies in model organisms and great potentials for translation, most geriatricians remain skeptical that geroscience will help them in the day‐by‐day battle with the consequences of aging in their patients. We believe that a closer collaboration between gerontologists and geriatricians is the key to overcome this impasse. There is evidence that trajectories of health with aging are rooted in intrinsic and extrinsic exposures that occur early in life and affect the pace of molecular and cellular damage accumulation with aging, also referred to as the “pace” of biological aging. Tools that measure the pace of aging currently allow for the identification of individuals experiencing accelerated aging and at higher risk of multimorbidity and disability. What we term “Translational Geroscience”, i.e., the merger of fundamental and translational science with clinical practice, is thus poised to extend the action of geriatric care to a life course perspective. By targeting core mechanisms of aging, gerotherapeutics should be effective in treating patients with multimorbidity and disability, phenotypes that are all too common among geriatric patients nowadays. We call for initiatives that enhance the flow of ideas between gerontologists and geriatricians to facilitate the growth of translational geroscience. This approach can widen the scope of geriatric care, including a new role for geroscience in the promotion and operationalization of healthy longevity.
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1 articles.
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