Aging hallmarks, biomarkers, and clocks for personalized medicine: (re)positioning the limelight

Free Radic Biol Med. 2024 Feb 21:S0891-5849(24)00092-3. doi: 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2024.02.012. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTThe rapidly increasing aging prevalence, complexity, and heterogeneity pose the scientific and medical communities in front of challenges. These are delivered by gaps between basic and translational research, as well as between clinical practice guidelines to improve survival and absence of evidence on personalized strategies to improve functions, wellbeing and quality of life. The triumphs of aging science sheding more and more light on mechanisms of aging as well as those of medical and technological progress to prolong life expectancy are clear. Currently, and in the next two to three decades, all efforts must be put in a closer interdisciplinary dialogue between biogerontologists and geriatricians to enable real-life measures of aging phenotypes to be used to uncover the physiological - and therefore translational - relevance of newly discovered aging clocks, biomarkers, and hallmarks.PMID:38395089 | DOI:10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2024.02.012
Source: Free Radical Biology and Medicine - Category: Biology Authors: Source Type: research
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