Blood NAD+ Levels Stay Flat With Age, Challenging Popular Aging Theory
This study suggests blood NAD+ tests may not reliably reflect biological age.
One of the most repeated ideas in longevity is that NAD+ declines as we age, a story that helped make NR and NMN household names in the space. This large, carefully controlled study takes a closer look. Across seven independent cohorts and more than 300 people, researchers found that whole-blood NAD+ levels stayed remarkably stable with age, and didn't shift meaningfully in response to exercise, protein-rich diets, or multimodal lifestyle interventions in older adults. Importantly, NR supplementation did raise blood NAD+ as expected, confirming that the supplements work pharmacologically, the question is just whether blood NAD+ is the right thing to be measuring in the first place.
Conflict of Interest Disclosure: Authors declare no competing interests.
Disclaimer: Research summaries are provided for informational purposes only and do not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to your health routine.
Topics
Related Studies
All researchBroken Elastin Bits May Drive the Joint Wear That Comes With Aging
Scientists found that when your body's elastin (the protein that keeps tissue springy) breaks into fragments, those bits trigger…
Staying Fit Before Age 70 Linked to Nearly Half the Alzheimer's Risk
Older adults with better heart and lung fitness had a much lower chance of developing Alzheimer's later on.
Regular Exercise May Rewind the Molecular Clock in Aging Muscle
In older adults, muscle showed lower activity in genes tied to energy production compared to younger people.
