The Checkup with Doctor Mike - The Scam Behind "Longevity Experts" | Dr. Eric Topol

Episode Date: May 18, 2025

I'll teach you how to become the media's go-to expert in your field. Enroll in The Professional's Media Academy now: https://www.professionalsmediaacademy.com/Huge thanks to Dr. Eric Topol... for coming on the show. Pick up a copy of his new book "Super Agers" here: https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Super-Agers/Eric-Topol/9781668067666Follow Dr. Topol on Twitter/X: https://x.com/erictopol00:00 Intro01:12 The Absence Of Doctors Online08:26 Full Body MRI / Peter Attia18:21 Bryan Johnson / Deep Sleep23:38 Hyper-Optimization / Biological Clock28:37 Alzheimer's / Ozempic40:05 Changing Guidelines41:52 Continuous Glucose Monitors48:22 Predatory Health Creators Online53:37 RFK Jr.1:02:14 Anti-vaxxers1:07:48 NIH Cuts1:18:42 Over-Processed Foods1:24:27 AI1:37:46 Tips For Longevity1:46:38 Wearables / TrackersHelp us continue the fight against medical misinformation and change the world through charity by becoming a Doctor Mike Resident on Patreon where every month I donate 100% of the proceeds to the charity, organization, or cause of your choice! Residents get access to bonus content, an exclusive discord community, and many other perks for just $10 a month. Become a Resident today:https://www.patreon.com/doctormikeLet’s connect:IG: https://go.doctormikemedia.com/instagram/DMinstagramTwitter: https://go.doctormikemedia.com/twitter/DMTwitterFB: https://go.doctormikemedia.com/facebook/DMFacebookTikTok: https://go.doctormikemedia.com/tiktok/DMTikTokReddit: https://go.doctormikemedia.com/reddit/DMRedditContact Email: DoctorMikeMedia@Gmail.comExecutive Producer: Doctor MikeProduction Director and Editor: Dan OwensManaging Editor and Producer: Sam BowersEditor and Designer: Caroline WeigumEditor: Juan Carlos Zuniga* Select photos/videos provided by Getty Images *** The information in this video is not intended nor implied to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. All content, including text, graphics, images, and information, contained in this video is for general information purposes only and does not replace a consultation with your own doctor/health professional **

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Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 How would it more time with the time with the life to have? With the Reve Appel Service get that. Bestel your
Starting point is 00:00:09 online and hold him bequeem and ready-gaped in market up. Naturally without mindest bestel-wet.
Starting point is 00:00:16 So, you'll be more time for the next podcast follow or your lovelings' and you're
Starting point is 00:00:21 in the Revevee app or in the Reveewe app your Reve appell service online bestelling in market upholing. I think that anybody who's selling supplements, who calls himself a longevity,
Starting point is 00:00:35 you know, scientists or expert, has lost their credibility. Because there's no supplements that have been shown to reverse aging, slow aging. It's a totally unregulated jungeloid space. And he's, unfortunately, he's one of the people that are doing this now. Longevity clinics are selling $2,000 life-saving full-body MRIs. TikTok influencers hawk glucose monitors to people without diabetes and best-selling authors are pushing supplements
Starting point is 00:01:05 to prolong life, all with zero real evidence. To unpack what the data actually shows, I'm joined on this episode by Dr. Eric Topold, world-renowned cardiologist researcher and founder of the Scripps Research Translational Institute. He's the author of the new book Super Agers, which takes an evidence-based look at the science behind living longer.
Starting point is 00:01:26 It's not bells and whistles, this is the real science, that will help you age gracefully. In this episode, we'll discuss aging, the hucksters capitalizing on your fear of aging, as well as what innovations we can expect to see from AI within our lifetimes. Without further ado, please welcome Dr. Eric Topal to the Checkup Podcast. Miller Light, the light beer brewed for people who love the taste of beer and the perfect pairing for your game time.
Starting point is 00:01:53 When Miller Light set out to brew a light beer, they had to choose great taste or 90-caller, per can. They chose both because they knew the best part of beer is the beer. Your game time, tastes like Miller time. Learn more at millerlight.ca. Must be legal drinking age. Dr. Topal, I've been following your work for a long time across social media. One of the few doctors on social media that I think is doing an amazing job following the evidence, telling the truth when it comes to complexities in health care related to AI, lunges, truly the science behind the research that's going on.
Starting point is 00:02:33 How did you get interested in talking about AI healthcare, specifically on the web, where that's not a natural place for a doctor to find themselves? Right. Well, thanks. It's good to be with you, Mike. So I think the story is kind of a long history of interested in, well, first it was people's genetics and then it was digital and then AI. and so they've been kind of sequential ways that we can deal with the data of people to promote health.
Starting point is 00:03:06 And so it goes back to that. And I'm really into ingesting lots of reading materials on a daily basis. And so trying to, for social media, it was really sharing that. And so that's why I got kind of stuck in the COVID years because, you know, I couldn't find, you know, really great, reliable sources. And so I said, well, I'm not an infectious disease guy, but I can deal with data and evidence. And so that was also the impetus to go back to the healthy aging story, which we had put a big effort in some years ago with the largest and I think singular cohort of healthy agers, average almost 90, 1,400 of them where we did whole genome sequencing. So we've had a longstanding interest in healthy aging because most of the medical world, as you well know, is,
Starting point is 00:03:57 disease-centric. And so we've always trying to look at the other side of this. And surprisingly, that study, which it was almost a decade of work, it showed very little. The genetics of healthy aging is kind of a small piece. And so that is liberating for people like me who have a terrible family history. When you got onto social media to talk about the research, was that primarily during COVID the first time that you were on social media? No, no. I got back in, in, um, 2009, then Twitter, I was very reluctant to do it because it seemed like it was about what people were eating for dinner or lunch and whatever, but a friend of mine convinced me that, you know, you have a lot of stuff that's worth sharing. And then so progressively, I would do more
Starting point is 00:04:46 of the stuff that I would read on a daily basis. So that's what led to, you know, now 16 years and, you know, into blue sky and LinkedIn and the others. But the main one that I really kind concentrate on these days is in substantiac because it's a long form and I can really get into the evidence of things and try to point out what's exciting or what's disillusioning or whatever. But yeah, I mean, what I found is communicating like that. If we all did that, we would be able to get this whole field, the medical community, the life science community. It would be much easier to have the real evidence out there. But unfortunately, we're outman. so much by an organized finance front of a lot of mis and even disinformation. Yeah. I remember in 2017, I just finished up my family medicine residency at the time, and I was writing for the new Perspectives blog for the AAP.
Starting point is 00:05:45 And I wrote that the absence or the lack of evidence-based physicians online is going to create a gray zone for which misinformation can flourish. And just three days later, we had this explosion of misinformation. information at a very critical time. So I love the fact that you're encouraging other doctors to do the same. Because I feel like what happens on social media is misinformation will always be shared. People say it in common tongue when they're hanging out with one another in locker rooms. But if there's a doctor present in that locker room, if there's a medical expert who can share
Starting point is 00:06:18 the other side of that equation, usually with evidence behind it, that will convince people to not fall victim to the misinformation. but there's not a lot of us on social media. Absolutely. You know, you discovered this at a young age and you really have a great presence, but we're talking about way less than 1% of physicians and scientists that, you know, take the time to do this
Starting point is 00:06:43 because it isn't the way they kind of grew up in their career's mood. It was that was not the kind of thing, their head down to do, whether it's seeing patients or whether it was doing their experiments or whatever. And so this is where we have to change. We have to change the whole biomedical landscape because if we don't, and it's going to take some time to counter this,
Starting point is 00:07:07 we're going to be subject to this lack of trust and this kind of alt-fax world that we're in right now. Yeah, I remember back in even my training days, it was labeled unprofessional if you were on social media or perhaps doing television medicine. Did you ever have any hurdles like that? Yeah, that's a really important point. point. That's how much the conservative medical establishment is. They didn't get it.
Starting point is 00:07:31 They, they, the large entities, I often call them trade guilds, they were against physicians. Don't do this. And of course, the institutions were very wary about this because you weren't representing the institution, but your name was associated. And so still today, there's that attention because the ability to express oneself and the ability that somehow that is connected with the profession or your society that you're a member of or your institution. It's a problem still today. Yeah. I rarely see so eye to eye with another guest about the importance of social media and health care. Like, I get the notion of where the unprofessionalism grew from. Because If you look at medical media 20 years ago and what the major players were on television,
Starting point is 00:08:24 it was people promising snake oil, miracle cures, fat loss remedies that were not evidence-based. And as a result, they thought if you were going into those fields, ultimately that's the only path forward. But I think with your work, you've certainly proven that there's a way to get the audience engaged from an evidence-based standpoint. You don't have to approach it with miracle promises or negative. there's a way to tell the truth and there's an appetite for it. Is that true? Yeah, absolutely. And this is, I think, of there's one area that this is, you just nailed it.
Starting point is 00:08:56 It's this whole longevity and aging because there is so much out there with these longevity clinics and companies and supplements and true snake oil, lack of evidence. It's rampant. The biohacking world that we are in now. That's what was an impetus that I really need to delve into this. because we need to get straight. What is the science? Where it can take us versus what is the dominant stuff that's out there right now. Yeah, I see, and I'm curious what your feelings are
Starting point is 00:09:30 on an opinion I've held for probably the last 10 years. I have this firm belief that health care is bad on two fronts. One on the tail end of the low socioeconomic status. People can get good health care because they don't have insurance. They're underinsured can't pay for their medications. But also on the flip side, for the VIPs of the world, who think they can buy good health care, they can buy shortcuts, they can demand antibiotics when they have a viral infection, they can demand propofol to go to sleep and end up having a terrible instance, like with Michael Jackson.
Starting point is 00:10:02 Do you see that happening in the world as well? And was that part of your impetus for talking about aging? You know, in my previous book, I actually pointed exactly what you're talking about because most people just think about, oh, it's the lower socioeconomic group that has problems with access and care, but there's the other side of it where it's too much medicine. So, for example, going out and getting total body MRIs with nothing substantiating it, right? And, of course, as I go out in the book, a colleague here in New York, Drew Kula, or a New Yorker journalist as well as a physician. He did this and now he's got this whole prostate issue he's dealing with
Starting point is 00:10:48 and he's a young guy and this is the problem when you get a test of thousands of dollars that doesn't have any evidence. It's heavily promoted. So what happens in the affluent that want to get more tests and they're somehow getting convinced from entities that this is good to promote their health, they wind up getting these rabbit hole,
Starting point is 00:11:10 dentalomas and they could get biopsies because something with their lung with their liver, they can get pneumothorax or, you know, bleed into their liver. I mean, this is the problem. We have over medicine just as much as we have under. And so when we look at the bad outcomes in this country, almost all of it's assigned to the fact of access and it's not just that. We have, unfortunately, a predatory-type problem in the affluent, and it isn't just executive physicals where you can pay thousands of dollars that have every test known to mankind. We have other channels to get a similar type of battery of tests that aren't needed.
Starting point is 00:11:54 Yeah. I actually had the CEO of Pernuvo, Andrew Lacey, sitting right across from me a couple months ago. Oh, wow. And I was very strict and honest about the fact that there is no evidence. evidence for benefit and he said well not yet and I don't want to wait 20 years to see the data and I'm like well what if the data shows that there's harm yeah because I believe one of your tweets recently you wrote that you believe that there is more harm to getting one of these
Starting point is 00:12:20 preventive whole body MRI scans is that true that's right I think until we know more we should assume that I do think if you a total body MRI in select circumstances might be worthwhile like, for example, you found tumor DNA in a blood at the microscopic level, and now you want to see, is there any, you know, macroscopic, is there something a correlate or in some cases you need to find out where is this coming from.
Starting point is 00:12:47 Or hereditary syndrome. Yeah, I mean, if you have, I mean... Ben 2A or something. If you have a predisposition gene that is unequivocal, you know, so-called pathogenic gene for cancer, that might be something to consider but even then
Starting point is 00:13:04 if you have to rely on the total body MRI to find it we're talking about billions of cells that are creating a mass that's pretty late you want to find it you want to prevent it and if you want to prevent it we're going to eventually be doing a blood test more widely in people who are at high risk that's one of the strategies that we will
Starting point is 00:13:23 eventually prevent cancer by knowing who is at risk and then getting all over it Because if you find it on an MRI, that's already pretty advanced. And this is the real problem is the people that are saying my life was saved because I got a total body MRI and they found this mass. Well, for every one of those, we have, now there's been hundreds of thousands of people who've had this test, actually, I think maybe even million plus.
Starting point is 00:13:54 And there are people who have been harmed. And there's no reporting of that data. There's just celebrities like the Kardashians and others. It's like you watched our clips from the interview. You know, this is crazy. And to say, oh, we're going to have the data in 20 years, well, how much harm can be done? And also, it's very expensive.
Starting point is 00:14:14 So I don't accept that. And I want hard evidence. And some of the doctors that are so-called longevity experts, authors, they are promoting this. There are companies that they call themselves longevity companies. Part of your being a member is you get a discounted total body MRI. This is terrible. How do you feel about those longevity experts
Starting point is 00:14:40 promoting these stand-up MRI, full-body MRIs? When in the past, perhaps, you've praised some of those individuals. I know like Peter Attia was someone whose work you've admired, what's your take on him discussing topics like the MRI rapamycin et cetera yeah so I challenged him I have a much smaller podcast ground truce where I write newsletters or interview and I had done a review of his book where I said there were a lot of good things but there also were a lot of bad things and one of them was the total body MRI there was rapamycin there was an overdose for protein that was advocated, and many other things. So I invited him, and of course, it's hard to get to Peter
Starting point is 00:15:26 through his people. Finally, he agreed to do it because he knew I had some questions for him. And he is, you know, very strong about his views and how, you know, it's good to take rapamycin. When I challenged him that this is an immunosuppressant, it's very potent, and it's different for every person. And also, you know, there's this rapamycin leaderboard where all the these people are taking different doses once a day, once a week. Nobody knows the dose. And there are no data in people that it's either safe or that it promotes healthy aging or slows aging or anything. So he, of course, is kind of like what you got from the Pernovo CEO. I don't want to wait 10 years. I have a, I kind of have a hunch and I want to practice medicine, you know, based on my
Starting point is 00:16:14 best. Well, I don't, I'm not, I don't buy it. You know, I admire Peter for some, like his section and his book on metabolic syndrome are excellent. But then there's so many things where he just jumps ahead, which I would challenge. He recommends that people take a gram of protein a day to eat. That's a huge amount per pound of body weight. I'm sorry, per pound of body weight per day. So a person that weighs 160, which is lightweight,
Starting point is 00:16:44 would be 160 grams of protein a day. No. but the half of that is kind of where we're at for older adults where it's shown to help maybe even some muscle mass but you know we go beyond that be careful of kidney disease etc yes and then of course now we know that very high levels of protein intake will promote atherosclerosis promotes inflammation particularly if it's animal protein and then you know there are there's several other things that he kind of goes off the track where there's no data there's just no evidence it's his beliefs. Now he's entitled to his beliefs and apparently, you know, he has a pretty big following,
Starting point is 00:17:22 but now he has a company that he's promoting longevity and he's selling supplements. And I basically think he wasn't doing that at the time of the book. I think that anybody who's selling supplements who calls himself a longevity, you know, scientists or expert has lost their credibility because there's no supplements that have been shown to reverse aging, slow aging, promote healthy aging, even though there's lots of claims, is a totally unregulated jungeloid space. And he's, unfortunately, he's one of the people that are doing this now. Yeah, I see this pattern evolve quite often where you have someone who's very interested in pursuing the future of health care, and they jump hurdle over many of the important
Starting point is 00:18:10 steps that you need in order to validate research, to understand if it works on a broad scale between interpersonal variability, between safety with other medications, and all those things are bypassed in the name of trying to get further. But as we've seen historically with health care, not even just with the last 20 years, but 100 years, there were things that expert opinion drove us into the direction that was very dangerous. Oh, yeah. And that goes for something as wild as bloodletting or very extreme instances. No, totally. And I think you have, to put the body of evidence together. What do we know? What don't we know? And, you know, what do we need to research to, you know, to find if there's compelling evidence? If you take that
Starting point is 00:18:56 hard stance, I think you're on terra firma. And we just need to do more of that. But unfortunately, if you go across the longevity landscape today, it's, there's not enough of what we're talking about here. And hopefully there's a way to get on track again. Yeah, I think the way we get on track is by having these conversations and shining a light on the negative ways to speak about longevity. I also had a guest on the podcast, Brian Johnson. Oh my gosh. Who is famously doing some very extreme things, testing on himself whether or not it's going to help him live longer. And I warn my audience to not start trying that for themselves, also not creating anxiety for themselves, thinking that if they don't have that, they're missing out on
Starting point is 00:19:44 a miracle cure-all product because it doesn't exist. These things are not just unproven, but proven to be harmful in a lot of instances. What's your take on the entire Brian Johnson spectacle? Yeah, I mean, he is the extreme version. Don't die. And that's, of course, absurd. But the things he's done, like having plasma frieces
Starting point is 00:20:05 from his young son and having a penile censored for monitoring his erections during the night. I mean, these are just, you know, the list goes on. on and on. There's nothing to substantiate any of his hundreds of supplements and his exact number of calories per day with his whole staff. It's absurd. And so, yeah, this is the worst example. Zero evidence. He's got a big fan club, you know, and it's really unfortunate because he's really the purveyor of misinformation regarding slowing the aging process. We have nothing that has been
Starting point is 00:20:46 shown, at least through objective measures, to slow the aging process with only a singular exception that Steve Horvath's clock, the methylation epigenetic clock, were exercise, and actually we wrote together a piece in The Lancet about it, but it was his original work. Exercise so far is all we have. And that's not, I don't even know if that's part of his, his regimen. No, it definitely is. I mean, the things that he does say right is, you know, staying out of the sun to decrease skin cancer risk, exercise, okay. Sleeping a correct number of hours per night. But then it, you know, even sleeping, the correct number is hours per night is taken to an extreme where he deems having only a perfect sleep score. And I'm like, that's not living in
Starting point is 00:21:33 reality. Your body can withstand one night's less of poor sleep because you have a life, a child, a job, et cetera. Oh yeah. No, I think the deep sleep story, and that's where science comes in. And I can't comment. I'm not familiar enough from the details of his stuff. But we've learned that every night during deep sleep is when we clear these toxic chemicals from our brain, right? And these glymphatics that are basically a channel. And what's interesting is, as we get older, of course, our deep sleep is reduced, and so we have to try to counter that. And what was really amazing is these medicines, like Ambien,
Starting point is 00:22:17 not only you may feel like you're getting more sleep, but you're actually getting these toxins are going backwards instead of out of your brain. It's amazing, really, how they truly backfire. So deep sleep is really worthwhile, and in fact, Tracking that can be helpful. It certainly helped me and sleep regularity. But as you say, Mike, it doesn't like, I now try to be pretty tight about when I go to sleep each night. But, you know, do I want to go out on a weekend or do stuff?
Starting point is 00:22:46 You have to have a life, too. But also, there's a misconception about total sleep because people think, oh, you've got to have eight hours. And as I reviewed all the data in super ages, seven hours is actually where it falls out. But that's just, you know, your sleep is. in bed seven hours, much more importantly is what is the quality of the sleep, particularly that slow wave, deep sleep. And people who are not great sleepers might benefit from, at least for a little while, tracking that and getting it to a, and as we get older, unlike you, it becomes more important
Starting point is 00:23:19 because it is a key determinant of risk for Alzheimer's disease. Yeah, that's why a lot of my patients who struggle with sleep, I'm quick to order a home sleep study to check for sleep apnea. It's one of the major causes, especially in our overweight population of a way of disturbing sleep without even realizing it. Oh, absolutely. That's step number one is there sleep apnea. Then after you get that rolled out, because it is common, then, of course, you know,
Starting point is 00:23:47 start looking at ways, and it's amazing all the interactions with exercise, what you eat, caffeine intake, alcohol, regularity when you go to bed, all these different factors. You have to learn yourself what it takes to be a better. sleeper, and the importance of that, I think we've really, and the mechanism, we've really now become, and that's part of the science of aging. It's about our age, our brain aging, which we now can get through an organ clock, which is amazing. We didn't have that a couple years ago. So there's all these metrics from the science of aging, all these mechanisms that have really blossomed our knowledge base. So you don't have to hack it or reverse it. You can actually
Starting point is 00:24:29 use the metrics to figure out ways to prevent age related diseases. That's the real premise of the book. Yeah. With Amex Platinum, access to exclusive Amex pre-sale tickets can score you a spot track side. So being a fan for life turns
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Starting point is 00:26:44 Exercise is good. Yes. Not playing sports because you fear an injury and you think that will ruin your athletic score? Problem. sleeping seven to nine hours a night is good trying to from an oCD perspective keep the same seven to nine hours rigidly ruining relationships not good and i feel like with the biohacking community they believe more is better yeah but in health care perfect is the enemy of good and what's best is actually the balance yeah and the balance has been missing no and it goes to
Starting point is 00:27:22 exercise too because these extremists. I mean, we were talking about Peter at the time when he wrote the book, he exercised four hours a day. Who has time to exercise four hours a day? He told me during his wealthy client's health. Yeah, he told me during the podcast I did with him, and he brought it down to two hours a day. Okay. But also, as I review, the data for extreme exercise is uncertain. That is, there's a level of intensity where you get to, then maybe it actually is not good for you. And the sleep, You know, people think eight or nine hours. Actually, the data, if you look at from the population level, everybody's different. Seven hours is kind of the, it's not nine.
Starting point is 00:28:01 In fact, that's where you start to see associations with lack of good outcome. So a lot of things in extreme, I agree with you. Moderation and everything is a good thing. Yeah. Yeah, I think that's smart. So maybe grandma was right with that age-old advice. There's a lot to that. tell me more about this biological clock because i know brian johnson has frequently said
Starting point is 00:28:25 his penis is 27 years old his brain is 40 years old i actually just used a scale that a company sent me and it told me my biological metabolic age was 26 or something even though i'm 34 35 um is this a validated way of measuring age and is it easier to just look at your collect get a blood pressure cuff, and check those numbers figuring out risk through that way as opposed to calculating a biological age. Yeah, so I don't think that these, getting these age metrics,
Starting point is 00:29:04 so there's body-wide aging, and the main one that's been validated extensively is through the DNA methylation. It can be done through saliva. Ideally, you don't wanna get it through a company because they have interest to make you younger and that you will send all your friends to get these tests and whatnot.
Starting point is 00:29:21 But yeah, it's very accurate for your epigenetic age, which many will equate with a biologic age. But there's a lot of other tests that are being sold as giving you your biologic age. They don't have a good validation. So that's one test. But the organ clocks, the organ clocks are not out commercially yet. They were initially discovered at Stanford
Starting point is 00:29:46 by Tony West Corey and colleagues. now they've been validated by multiple groups and multiple large cohorts. And so they're going to be out there eventually, and that's eight organs and your immune system. And they will be very valuable when they're available from a reputable, you know, laboratory, because they will tell us in a person at risk, so let's say your concern is Alzheimer's, what about your brain clock? Is it outpacing your chronologic actual age? and how does it stack up against your other organs.
Starting point is 00:30:20 So, yeah, we're not ready. I don't know what clock, you know, Brian Johnson's gotten because the ones that are now validated in, that I mentioned, are not available unless he had some special access. I doubt it. And then, of course, there's other things. Like there's the plasma protein. It's called P-Tal for Prosphor-Related Tau-217,
Starting point is 00:30:43 which 20 years in advance of Alzheimer's tells you, whether you're at elevated risk, and it adds to other things like the genetic APOE4 allele or your family history. So getting back to your question, yes, you should have your LDL cholesterol and your blood pressure. Those are standard things. But we will have, and that's so exciting about preventing. So primary prevention of the big three age-related diseases has been a fantasy for millennia.
Starting point is 00:31:13 But we now are approaching a time when you have ability. to get these data in the right people at the right time in their lives and with multimodal AI, say, this is the one you're going to be concerned about and we're going to prevent this or at the very least we're going to put it off for many, many years.
Starting point is 00:31:33 And that I think is our exciting, unique opportunity right now. Yeah, how does this work on a practical, actionable sense? So, for example, for my patients over the age of 40, I calculate ASCVD risk score, a 10-year score of them having a stroke or heart attack. And then from there, I can decide whether or not they're a good candidate for a statin or other modalities.
Starting point is 00:31:56 So I remember vividly an episode of a TV program that I actually went to the premiere of with Chris Hemsworth and Peter Attia, where they told Chris Hemsworth that he had an elevated risk for Alzheimer's. And it drastically changed his worldview. I don't know if that's a good test, and I don't know if I would recommend that test for my patients because outside of making healthy lifestyle changes, which I've been preaching to them before getting the results of that test, what changes finding out that you're high risk for a condition like that?
Starting point is 00:32:30 Well, I think for the right person, it can be a world of difference because in general, we know about lifestyle factors. And I call it lifestyle plus because it's not just diet, lots of details. there, sleep, exercise. But it's all these other layers of data. It includes things like social isolation and nature, being out in nature, and environmental exposures. I mean, there's a long list and we can get in some of the details if you like. But the point is most people don't go after all these things unless they have specificity about them. Then you can see, and I don't know the story about this fellow but then you can say huh i am doing everything i can to prevent this condition that i
Starting point is 00:33:17 never want to get that i'm at high risk for so but the point is it's not just that so firstly now used to be you could only until recently you could only say you're at risk for Alzheimer's but guess what we can't tell you when it could be when you're age 100 or it could be when you're 60 we can't tell you what now we can tell you when that that's very helpful And now, just like LDL, you can change your lifestyle, get even more into it, and you can see your Ptow 217 come down. And that's like an LDL cholesterol, where you should expect, and we have to, again, validate all this,
Starting point is 00:33:56 that you would slow the progression because you get that marker 20 years or more before any mild cognitive impairment of Alzheimer's. So we have multiple biomarkers, which this one is the best, And we also, for example, the Ozympic drugs, the Glyp1 drugs, they're in trials now in thin people to prevent Alzheimer's. If one of those hits, which it's certainly possible,
Starting point is 00:34:26 given all the other data we've seen, then you have a drug, a disease-modifying drug for Alzheimer's. And by the way, they have potent anti-inflammatory effects in the brain. So they really are a good candidate, and there are many other drugs in the pipeline. So if I was this fellow, and I was concerned about my family history of Alzheimer's, I had, let's say, an APOE4 allele,
Starting point is 00:34:50 which is a carrier, 25 or so percent of us have that. I didn't have a good lifestyle. I might want to know, I might want to get a Petow 217. A lot of people don't know about that yet. It's in the book, and I've heard a substack about it recently. It's a breakthrough test, and that would then set me into a plan
Starting point is 00:35:09 to prevent the disease and be up on the new treatments added to what we have today because mostly what we have today is lifestyle but most people are not adopting those changes yeah you know those lifestyle changes are so valuable for not just the brain so like making every one of those adaptations of exercise diet sleep uh social removing social isolation creating a healthy mental health space, they're valuable not just for Alzheimer's risk, but for so many other risks. And me being a family medicine doctor, I find myself in an unusual space to talk about this, because most people who are in this space speak from a longevity standpoint or from a research standpoint. And from those standpoints, all that research is very exciting. To me, when I'm trying
Starting point is 00:36:00 to make the patient in front of me as healthy as possible, I'm not just thinking about a disease. I'm not thinking about a organ. I'm thinking about them as a whole. Yes. So holistically. And if I'm thinking about them holistically, I want them institute those changes irrespective of their p-tow level, right?
Starting point is 00:36:17 Yes, yes. So that's why I don't know how much it changes my guidance versus why I like the ASCVD risk is because that might change my guidance about medication, whereas I would never recommend a healthy, low-risk person to take a statin. But if they're at high risk, now I can implement something that would have
Starting point is 00:36:35 negative repercussions from someone healthy, but positive repercussions for someone who has potentially high risk for having one of these instances. Yeah, but it goes deeper than that in a respect because as a cardiologist, we have seen all the trends of the lower LDL potentially the better. And we have all these new things, like these injectable PCSK-9, monoclonic antibodies, and antisense. So we could really go get the LDL down to, you know, 20 or 10 instead of that getting less than 70, for example. But again, if you knew the person is at very high risk, which we can do now for cardiovascular, so it's taking it to a different level.
Starting point is 00:37:16 I wouldn't recommend getting LDL down as some authors do and people do to the lowest possible level. But if I knew somebody was at high risk and want to achieve primary prevention, that's a prototypic example. But, you know, I think this whole idea is that you're right. I spend a lot of time with patients, and I suspect you do, because you want to get granular with them. What are they eating? What is their exercise?
Starting point is 00:37:46 What time a day? And you basically need to work with them to how is it going to work in their life? Like, what time a day do you have to exercise? And how can we change some of these things that you're eating and get rid of the ultra-processed food? And so this takes time, and most physicians don't have that time. Right. And so this is a real problem. This is our medical system because people don't know what they,
Starting point is 00:38:11 they don't have that patient doctor relationship with the gift of time to be able to really get to the nitty gritty of how each person can pull out all the stops. So you're right. If we could do that, it doesn't happen. Meanwhile, what we do know is a person is much more likely to get serious if they have specificity about a condition. So, you know, they may know all these things, but when it comes to them and they are, you know, motivated, that's when you see, like, for example, the randomized study was presented by the Neurology Association last month in San Diego, where I live, they took
Starting point is 00:38:54 a group that all had p-tow elevated, so they all had a higher risk of Alzheimer's, and they randomly assigned to pull out all the stops for lifestyle. And these people, People had their p-tow and the other markers go drop down 50, 75%. And they felt much better because they were doing things in their lifestyle. They would not have done had it not been they were parting of a trial. So we tend to think if we can talk to patients and really try to get them to adopt all the things that we know, it's great. but it just doesn't happen. You're saying as a motivational tool, it could be valuable.
Starting point is 00:39:37 It could be, I think it's a motivation, but it's also, it just doesn't happen in the typical patient doctor experience today. I mean, so where are they going to get this information? And I'm talking about all the details of it and all the evidence for it. Because some people say, you know, I just recently had a patient come in,
Starting point is 00:39:57 and towards the end of the visit, the wife was there, and she said, Dr. Topol, is it okay if he continues his moderate drinking? I said, well, you know, what is that? And she says, well, he has two tequila and six beers every night. And I thought you was joking with me, Mike. I really did.
Starting point is 00:40:18 No, of course, yeah, that sounds. You know, my fellow was with me. I mean, he was also, you know, bug-eyed. And so, no, that's not moderate drinking, you know. But people have a lot of misconceptions out there. But if I hadn't asked, I could have, if I'm in a rush, like a lot of doctors say, moderate drinking, that's fine. Yeah. Okay.
Starting point is 00:40:37 So you have to get into the depth of these, and people just don't know, you know, moderate to them and what is, you know, they don't even know what actually is ultra-processed foods. Right. And so this requires an education for many people, and like you said, motivation. Most people, frankly, are not motivated until they know that there's a goal. Don't get this disease, and this will help you not get disease. And we're going to get other things to help, not just lifestyle. Sure. Are there any things on the horizon in terms of preventive treatments besides the GLP-1 medications
Starting point is 00:41:19 that are in trial for someone who does have an elevated risk for a neurodegenerative condition that once they find out, it's not just they're making lifestyle changes, but there is some kind of medication or a different approach. Yeah, there's several drugs that are now being assessed for primary prevention of Alzheimer's. Unlike the drugs we have today, which are not very good, they carry high risk,
Starting point is 00:41:40 they're in people who already have Alzheimer's, and we've already seen you can get amyloid out of the brain, but it doesn't get people's status. Well, that whole hypothesis is kind of shaky as well. Yeah, yeah, no, this is to prevent not just the accumulation of these proteins that are misfolded, but also to prevent the inflammation in the brain. And so what's amazing is there's this whole revolution
Starting point is 00:42:02 of these gut peptides, like the story with the Glyp 1 and glitone, and now there's triple receptors and there's all these other gut hormones that, because there's a gut brain axis, there's they're now going into trials and of course pill form not just injectables and so we're going to see many different drugs beyond the the current ozimic and is upbound for this potential so it is exciting because the problem we have today is we're trying to come up with cures but prevention is a lot better it's a lot relatively easier and that's where you get to really not
Starting point is 00:42:50 just the best for the patients, but the bank for the buck of investment in the research and in the years of high-quality life lost because of having one of these age-related diseases. Yeah. I oftentimes want more prevention, but I'm also realizing that if you don't have good validated data behind that, it's easy to go in the wrong direction. In my career, a good example that is aspirin for primary prevention and how we've walked that back because of what we learned in newer research. So I'm hoping that we can do this in a way where we're not putting the cart before the horse and we're taking a patient-centric approach and not rushing the research in order to put out good data as opposed to rushing and putting out something that perhaps
Starting point is 00:43:39 might not be helpful in the long term. Yeah, I mean, I think as you well know, you always have to reassess the evidence as it comes in. This is where a lot of people got lost trust. during the pandemic because we were learning things. And it's always that case. I mean, it's a dynamic thing. And search for the truth is not so simple. It's not a static thing. So, yeah, I mean, we have to reassess the aspirin story, as you point out,
Starting point is 00:44:05 is really important because there are tens of millions of people taking aspirin. I just had a resident present the case and said, patients taking aspirin for presurgical clearance. I said, why? And they said, I don't know. And I'm like, well, this is where we investigate. again, we step in, so. Yeah, and we get stuck in these things because,
Starting point is 00:44:24 and even our colleagues in medicine, they might not keep up with the literature to tell a person age 70 plus that the bleeding is more of a risk than the benefit of preventing. Yeah, I actually, Dr. Paul Offutt, who's been a multi-guessed on this channel, had a great term for it, medical inertia. Yes.
Starting point is 00:44:44 Where we just continue on with the old medicine without actually seeing what's new, But again, we gotta balance it with that, not jumping too far ahead. I'm curious as someone who's looking into tech in healthcare quite often, what's your take on the continuous glucose monitors? Because I have a lot of questions posed to me
Starting point is 00:45:03 by patients who don't have either type 1 diabetes or type 2 diabetes who are interested in it. I've seen influencers, most popularly the glucose goddess. I don't know if you've heard of her. Yes, I have, she's in the book. She recommends everyone gets a glucometer, in order to check the velocity or the rise of the spikes. And for me, from my understanding,
Starting point is 00:45:28 I have no idea what to do with that data because when I look at someone's hemoglobin A1C, I know what to do. I look at someone's fasting blood sugar, I know what to do. When I look at their two hour post-pranile, I know what to do. But when I look at an elevation post-meal,
Starting point is 00:45:44 I don't know what to make with that data. Is there something that I'm missing here or are people, again, putting carp before the horse? Well, there's a lot there to unpack, Mike. So we recently did a big study where we got all the layers of data, including the glucose monitor,
Starting point is 00:46:01 but the gut microbiome, the genome, everything they ate and drank and their sleep, physical activity, because you need all these things to understand what does this spike from? Some people, they have no spikes. They can eat anything. And then others can get spikes 200 plus that are long in duration.
Starting point is 00:46:19 And when you see a spike like that, that would say, hmm, there may be a risk, a higher risk of eventually developing type 2 diabetes. But I don't think these getting healthy people, getting continuous glucose, has much role except for, you know, a couple weeks or, you know, now that it's consumer available. Yeah. Just health curiosity. Yeah, curiosity.
Starting point is 00:46:44 We don't know that the spikes, except for, perhaps the increased risk of diabetes, we have a paper coming out in nature medicine about that very soon. But does it have any risk increase for cancer, for Alzheimer's, for cardiovascular disease? We have no clue about that. That's the studies need to be done. But one thing that's really, of course, fascinating, the work from Aaron Siegel and Israel and his colleagues, they did that brought in this whole field, is that if you and I ate the exact same
Starting point is 00:47:16 thing, the exact same amount, the exact same time. One of us might have a no spike and the other one could be, you know, the 240. So we each are unique and the same work was done with lipids by Tim Specter in King's College in the UK. So it isn't just, our metabolism is very unique. And someday we could get a diet that emphasizes the things that avoid unnecessary metabolites or high glucoses. But right now, we're not there. We have a big investment by the NIH to go after that right now. And it's, you know, it's going to take years to sort it out. But the AI diet, that sort of thing. Yeah. But right now, this is more, you know. Future than anything. Yeah. It's, it's, it's, it's, if people learn about certain food, certain people that are, they, they have really big spikes. And those who have no
Starting point is 00:48:13 spikes, it's a, oh, I'm, you know, I'm in a very nice place right now. But like you pointed out earlier, as we get older, you know, it may not be the same. So it's not just a one-off thing. Or the microbiome can change and then it might not be the same. There you go. So we have to learn whether having this every five-minute glucose measurement, it takes us beyond the standard measurements that you were alluding to. And it's an unknown now. Yeah. Yeah, I think about impacts, much like how you said the whole body MRI can have negative impacts. I remember getting some genetic tests done and it said that I have low risk for developing type 2 diabetes. And I said, oh, well, should that mean I go out and eat a ton of refined sugar? Like, what is the action of,
Starting point is 00:49:00 again, I'm family medicine. I'm always actionable, actionable from these tests. And if the action is not guiding me, I'm telling my residents to not order those tests. Right. So for example, I had a elderly patient who was having lower GI bleeding and my resident was about to order a colonoscopy. And I said, well, did you ask the patient if they would want surgery if they find something? And they're like, no. They went.
Starting point is 00:49:27 The patient said, I don't want surgery under any circumstances. My life is already in a bad position. My quality of life is below where I want to be. I wouldn't do any surgery. We don't need to do a colonoscopy anymore. There you go. So I think we need to get back to that age of understanding why we're getting to.
Starting point is 00:49:42 We do too many damn tests. It's just ridiculous. And I'm not saying for research, we shouldn't do them. Like all this research, we need to get to the point where we can individualize someone's diet to their genetics, to their CGM results, but we're just not there. No.
Starting point is 00:50:00 And then the people that are weaponizing that are weaponizing usually for some kind of profit motive. I mean, I remember even seeing a documentary where they fed collegiate athletes, different varieties of, animal-based protein meals, and they saw that there was some fat content in the blood after the meal. I'm like, well, that's supposed to happen. Right. Right. And you're painting it out as if they're somehow unhealthy. Yeah. So it's easy to twist the science when you're taking
Starting point is 00:50:27 truth wrapped in a lie and exposing it to the major audiences. So I see that happening a lot. I'm actually curious, what was the reference to glucose goddess in your book? Oh, well, I mentioned that there are influencers like her. I mean, Peter Attia was really keen on them too. You know, I've been involved in this space for almost 15 years that I was on the board of Dexcom. So I could see their value in people who had type 1 diabetes and in certain people with type 2 diabetes that hard to control that take us beyond, you know, a measure that's reflecting a month or months of. but I, you know, I really have circumspect about where we need to get the data for consumers before we have the glucose goddess and others that are saying you should, you should do this. And after they do this, they then sell a supplement to decrease your spike.
Starting point is 00:51:20 Oh, yeah, you know, exactly. You know, this is the problem we have right now. This is a predatory world without data. And, you know, people, any given person with large social media, media present, I think hers is TikTok or something, they reach these, and then they basically, it's replaced in too many circles, you know, where is the evidence? And this, this person told me, I'm going to go do this. It's just, it's anecdotal. And it's even, you're often baseless. It's, it's really, for the people that spend their lives actually trying to do the research, it's, it's
Starting point is 00:51:59 dispiriting because it just basically negates the hard effort it takes to get the data. Yeah, doing quality research is hard. It's demoralizing. Because oftentimes you're proving yourself wrong more than you're proving yourself right. In fact, when you're setting out to do good research, you're trying to prove that you're wrong, the null hypothesis. And most people aren't familiar with that. And I think the reason why I went into social media and talking about health care is because I saw researchers who were amazing at doing that year in and year out, we're in good at doing this, the social media world. And I said, well, I'm not a great researcher.
Starting point is 00:52:36 I can't do bench work. I'm not, that's not where my talents lie. So let me take their work and then bring it to the general public. Whereas other people who are not good at researching just make up their own research and start pushing it out for these predatory marketing purposes. You know, it's funny you mentioned that because some years ago in the journal Science, It's one of the very top journals. It was a thing called the Kardashian Index.
Starting point is 00:53:00 Okay. And what they did was they took the number of citations you had in papers and then your presence on then Twitter. And they saw that, you know. Drastic imbalance. Yeah. And it was really funny. So it's so true what you're bringing up.
Starting point is 00:53:15 And that's why, as we talked about earlier, it's really important for everybody in the research community to have a voice and to stand up for their work and for what is, what we know as of truth and facts because without that look what's happened and there's this kind of collapse mode so i i am with you um i don't i mean being on social media uh is on any given day can be very challenging but it's like everything else in medicine there's a net benefit right and so i i think it's really important to stay with it and to encourage i try to get all our young
Starting point is 00:53:51 faculty and trainees to get on it and I have variable success because you know they say they don't feel like they have enough to contribute or they will just be followers watchers but I don't want to actually be people to post things and they've seen how how you know people get assaulted attacked they don't want to be part of that I understand it's you have to be callous and you have to be committed that you want to share what you think is worthwhile, helpful information. Yeah, that's going to be tough for everyone to do. I think that's why you're seeing those variable levels of success. But I think even for those individuals who have tried it and realize it's not for them,
Starting point is 00:54:32 that could be okay. But then support your colleagues who are doing that work. Because I look at a post from the CDC and it has 10 likes on it. I'm like, where are the doctors supporting that post? Exactly. So you don't have to be out there shaping and creating content on your own. you could be supporting someone else's content who's doing that work. And ultimately, what the algorithms feed back to us is what we like, what we support.
Starting point is 00:54:57 And if the general public only supports the extremist content, the algorithm will just be a mirror of that. Absolutely. No, we have less than 1% of physicians who are actively engaged in one of the major platforms. And on the other hand, you know what percent of people we have that have no, who have done their own research and whatever. We are so outnumbered, and this is a real problem. So I don't know that we can ever get everyone, but even if we get 10%, that would be a huge win.
Starting point is 00:55:27 Yeah, yeah. The second part of why I think it's beneficial to have more medical professionals who are evidence-based online is for public good in the essence of public health has become political. And in order to impact public health, you have to have a presence.
Starting point is 00:55:48 For example, I oftentimes, when I go to medical conferences, I'll tell a story as an example. I was on an airplane once across Atlantic, and a young gentleman went into anaphytic shock. I asked for his epipen, he didn't have one. I asked the flight attendant for their kit. There wasn't one there, but I did see epinephrine for the cardiac ACLS kit.
Starting point is 00:56:08 And I said, okay, let's do some rough calculations. We MacGivered it, and we gave it to him, saved his life. It was a great story. Yeah. If I did that and didn't, have social media, no one would have heard about it. I then told the story on YouTube. It got 10 million views. Senator Chuck Schumer calls me. We're able to do a press conference advocating for airlines
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Starting point is 00:59:09 I wish I could spend all day with you instead. Uh, Dave, you're a good. Huff, mute. Hey, happens to the best of us. Enjoy some goldfish cheddar crackers. Goldfish have short memories. Be like goldfish. So public advocacy through social media is also very valuable.
Starting point is 00:59:29 And I think it's never been more valuable than in the day and age where we find ourselves with RFK Jr. in the helm of HHS. What's your take on that? Yeah, it's more than troubling. And we have the misinformation at the highest level unimaginable because the people that are now at HHS and these agencies in leadership are ones that many have been taken a contrarian view of the evidence and they're now seeking to eradicate or suppress the people,
Starting point is 01:00:11 people who are in the mainstream of doing the work and the research and gutting the resources. There are some common threads. I mean, we do want to see work that's being done to anti-up to ultra-processed foods, air pollution, microplastic nanoplastics, big issue for pro-inflammatory impact and with organ damage like the heart and brain, forever chemical. So maybe RFK Jr. could help us because in past administrations, we've seen no serious attempt. Now, that's the good part. The bad part is if you keep taking away the people at these agencies, the funding of grants that have gone through peer review and got a meritorious scoring, and you're now saying, well, we're not funding that
Starting point is 01:01:07 anymore and you're taking down billions of funding from the crown jewel of biomedical research in the world which is now 47 billion which is actually trivial compared to you know our national expenditures and the investment is of course extraordinary you start taking that apart and now we're hearing about 40% reduction of that beyond what we've already seen we're talking about gutting and not just at this remarkably opportune time of what we're we're talking about we're can do to promote healthy aging. But we're going to just slow that down. We're giving that opportunity away, whether it's other countries, whether it's just put aside for a long time, because that's the priority make America healthy again. If that really was what we're after, we'd be doing these
Starting point is 01:01:56 things to prevent the age-related diseases of cancer, cardiovascular, and neurodegenerative. That would be our center stage, but it isn't. Well, our center right now is, let's just keep taking away. Let's get rid of all the leadership. Let's put in place some people who have not been supportive of what would be considered ground truths in biomedical work. So we have a really difficult mission right now. And eventually, I am optimistic. We will be fine. But we will lose momentum. We will lose years. And that's really sad because it's kind of like during COVID in that first year we had no vaccine and what if you could just make it to the point where you could have a vaccine and you were in that advanced age and high risk group immunosuppressed
Starting point is 01:02:50 whatever and we're kind of like that time is a very important aspect of this and we're going to lose this time to get the mission accomplished of preventing the big three diseases that compromise or health So the way I see it is this is all going to happen. We have the blueprints of how to do this, take advantage of what we already know and what we will know. But by taking apart our health research system and public health agencies and taking away all the research funding for independent work that was reviewed by Congress and appropriated by Congress, but is then getting negated by being doged or executive orders, which is, it
Starting point is 01:03:35 least in my view, we'd be considered illegal. It certainly isn't the way it's designed. So we have a rough patch, but I don't lose my kind of optimistic sense that we will, we will prevail ultimately. Just that time factor. Is it going to take one, three years? And then how much do you actually lose, you know, for that unit time? Is it more than a year? Because you've got to reboot stuff. That's the uncertainty that I have. You think about all those people that will end up suffering unnecessarily. And it's sad. And I appreciate you trying to call balls and strikes in this scenario where, you know, what RFK is recommending about chronic disease is good and what he's saying about vaccines is bad. I used to be that way too, especially before he came in to HHS as acting
Starting point is 01:04:22 secretary. But now I've lost that. I've become a bit more pessimistic and a bit more alarmist than I usually am because the whole notion of make America healthy again of the idea that we need to focus on chronic health more so than infectious disease all these premises that he talked about getting chemicals out of our children's foods and out of our water systems all of that seemed to be just talking points well they has recruited you know the MAHA moms have a huge part of our country now, the moms that believe that their kids got autism from vaccines and all these things that you just mentioned. So he is getting to a lot of people. The problem is he makes stuff up. He says, okay, take vitamin A and cod liver oil for measles. And then these poor kids
Starting point is 01:05:14 wind up in the hospital with, you know, fulminant liver problems. I mean, so the hospitalizations that have been for the Texas measles outbreak is not just for measles. It's because of what he's done. and not promoting the vaccines. And when he does, then he gets this, the Maha movement to go against him. And then he backs off. And he just vacillates from making stuff up to please his base, if you will, of people that he made. He created this along with Andrew Wakefield, who propagated, fabricated data that ultimately was, you know, had to be retracted from the Lancet. and that was the most destructive study in the history of vaccines
Starting point is 01:05:54 because it was all made up. And so we have fabrication, you know, all over the place. And I do agree with you that this is unacceptable, but I don't know a way it's going to get rained in because these people are de facto in control now and they are propagating all sorts of things to do a study now that is what the vaccines cause autism. that is probably one of the most carefully studied things we've done in the history of medicine.
Starting point is 01:06:24 And to do a $500 million study effort to come up with a universal flu vaccine using technology that are decades old when we have such great studies from multiple academic labs that show here's the path to a universal flu, universal COVID vaccine, so we don't have to go through variants and boosters. But it's just going backwards. We just keep going backwards, and with myths and conspiracy theorists, and it's really sad, Mike. Yeah, the amount of misinformation shared is wild because it's happening on major outlets, and I don't know how it's being allowed to happen.
Starting point is 01:07:03 He'll say the MMR vaccine has immunity waning at 4.5%, which is just completely wrong. Lancet published the results, and it's 0.4%, not 4.5. he'll say China has a diabetes population of their children by 50%. 50% and it just fully made. No, 50% of the population of China has diabetes. That's according to RFKJU, that you just make stuff up. Rota virus vaccine has killed more people than it's saved, just made up statistics.
Starting point is 01:07:35 And then, like for getting the infectious front, you would think at least he would focus on the food aspect. And his focus on the food aspect has been to remove one oil and replace it with beef towel. Oh yeah. No, the beef towel thing is completely. And it's sitting at a fast food burger joint
Starting point is 01:07:52 celebrating that there's beef. Right. Like it plays like an S&L parody. It does. And somehow people are not realizing that that's happening. In fact, I did a debate against 20 vaccine hesitant
Starting point is 01:08:06 slash anti-vax individuals where I was surrounded by them and they each had five minutes to sit and talk with me. We did it for three hours. Wow. And one of the individuals said to me something I won't forget. He said, now that, well, it was right before RFK actually was confirmed.
Starting point is 01:08:22 And he said, now, if RFK is to be confirmed as HHS secretary, will he then be the expert and you're the one sharing misinformation? I said, whoa, the take on that. No, and my answer was, and I'm curious what you think of that answer, science doesn't happen by an individual expert. It happens by consensus, and the consensus groups that have been putting in this work, the WHO, Gavi for the Vaccine Alliance, these groups have been doing it for decades, they're the ones who are leading the consensus-driven statements, not RFK Jr. or one person, whoever is the head of HHS. Yeah, I couldn't agree with you more. That's how we get to the ground truce of, in this case, vaccines and how no public health. strategy has been more effective for saving lives, children, and adults alike in history.
Starting point is 01:09:19 And so to try to take that down is just egregious. And so, as you say, not just the WHO, not just Gabby. I mean, we're just talking. The problem is, if you go back during the pandemic, because the WHO wouldn't say this virus is airborne and they had the lockdowns or light lockdowns, whatever you want to call they had the schools and it's all this ammo for these all these agencies they don't know what they're talking about and so the loss of trust people were not presenting the data in a straight way or saying we don't know say we don't know if the whole you know you know you know all you know all
Starting point is 01:10:01 all this stuff so we are at a nadir of trust because of some of this stuff it fed into the you know And I'm hoping that we'll gradually, it won't happen right away, gradually turn this around and get the trust reestablished. Yeah, the hypocrisy I want to highlight for the audience is WHO and CDC had missteps. I talked about him quite often on this channel. I actually interviewed Dr. Fauci a couple of times on the channel and spoke about some of the errors to him. We call those errors.
Starting point is 01:10:33 We call the mistakes of judgment. We call the mistakes of communication, mistakes of science, whatever they were in each individual situation. But hey, how come RFK Jr. doesn't own up to his mistakes? No, no, no. Where are these mistakes of making up data, making up statements that HIV doesn't cause AIDS? How in the world can we have someone at the helm of a health agency just take that notion with no evidence? I remember also in this vaccine debate, there was a pediatric oncology nurse who was vaccine hesitant.
Starting point is 01:11:07 And she said to me, why do you think that RFK can't be at the helm when you agree with some of the things that he's talking about? Like trying to remove forever chemicals or these things out of our system. And I said, well, what is, they actually added this part out. So this is kind of a fun fact for the audience as well. I said, and she said, why don't you allow him to be HHS secretary? I don't even agree with everything my husband does. And I've chosen to spend my life with him. I said, great example.
Starting point is 01:11:37 Tell me what's the most important factor that leads you to be confident to stay with your husband for the rest of your life. She says it's his faith, his faith in religion, his faith in our family, got it. For me, the equivalent of that for who I want as HHS secretary is scientific rigor. Right. And if your husband broke his faith, would you want to be with your husband? She said, no. He said, well, if the HHS secretary breaks scientific rigor over and over and over again,
Starting point is 01:12:03 I don't want them as head of HHS, even if they have an occasionally good idea. So I thought that was a fair response. That's perfect. I mean, there's no room for, you know, arrogance, eubris, not willing to fess up that, you know, or you're wrong, that you got the wrong read at that time. And, you know, unfortunately, this is outworked. You know, Francis Collins, who was a phenomenal NIH director, he wrote a book after the pandemic, the path to wisdom and his book is full of telling his mistakes and that's who you kind of admire is
Starting point is 01:12:37 you know he he really realizes how his communication could have been better and he learned from people like you did sitting and talking with the people that were uh had different beliefs and that coming together and in that realization that is the humility we we always have to have that and we're not seeing that right now, as you aptly point out. And it's all the way to the top. You know, it's not just at HHS. It's almost like, don't ever fess up to a mistake. You know, don't, this is, you know, it could be tariffs. It could be, you name it. There's never, isn't it something? There's never a mistake. Yeah. Yeah. Because it's become a PR strategy. Yeah. If you're just very confident, eventually there'll be something else. Oh yeah. Not only that, but you keep saying the same
Starting point is 01:13:25 thing they made up enough times that you even believe it, right? And then everybody believes that's the problem. It's amazing. Yeah. It's really a bad situation in that regard. How does the cuts to NIH, probably less so USAID, but how did the cuts to these major research agencies impact our knowledge of aging and longevity? Oh, I think it will be potentially immeasurable. It's an attack at multiple fronts, I mean, there's a National Institute of Aging, which has been the NIH across the board. We've seen, you know, we're threatened with not just a 40% cut of all NIH, but also the so-called indirects, which is mostly paying for the space and the utilities and the things that are needed to do the research, not just, you know, tallying up the financial aspects, which is the administrative.
Starting point is 01:14:25 side. So that's still in suspension. We were talking about 15% versus what is going at normally universities, 60%. We have the universities that are under siege and so higher education. So all of this impacts high quality research that goes through the peer review process, which has been, that itself has been slowed. Grants, I mean, there's now so many grants that have been canceled. I just had to lay off 15 of our people in the recent weeks, people I've worked with for more than a decade. And we are definitely doing,
Starting point is 01:15:02 and we spent seven years to develop the welderly cohort of 1,400 people that some of these research projects. The Women's Health Initiative? Decades, the Diabetes Prevention Project, decade. They're all taken down. And every one of these, like for example, a lot of things got wrong from the Women's Health Initiative. and all of a sudden, you know, female hormones were condemned.
Starting point is 01:15:27 They would cause cancer and blood clots. Now we're learning from the science of aging. One of our objectives should be to prevent early ovarian failure because that advantage that women have premenopausal is remarkable protecting from all these age-related diseases, whether it's rejuvenating the thymus gland or prevention of the ovarian failure, which is, of course, it's going to happen in all women eventually.
Starting point is 01:15:56 So we are learning, in fact, from the work in the organ clocks, that taking hormones is actually good for the immune system and the brain. Now, that's counter to the old work that was done in the women's health initiative. And so much more needs to be done if we can prevent Alzheimer's in women, which is more common in men, even age-adjusted, and it was tied to that we could be thinking about in the women who are at high risk should they be considering taking the right doses and kinds of hormones that's the kind of thing we should be doing right now and i want to highlight to the audience research we should be doing
Starting point is 01:16:35 not you should be taking yes because there are people who have created these hormone clinics where they're just slinging hormones left and right oh i couldn't agree with you more it's a big unknown but there's provocative data yeah that we should be on it and again not cutting research for it. No, no, and not making premature selling predatory stuff without the evidence, which is just rampant out there. So, yeah, that's just an example of the science of aging has brought us so much new information that we didn't have.
Starting point is 01:17:08 We wouldn't have what I just said if it wasn't for discovery of organ clocks and the ability to say when you're going to get this illness and here's what we're going to do so we put that, push that off for, you know, a decade or forever. So I think this is a field which is exciting. I mean, he's never had a more propitious opportunity as right now. And at least in this country, we're not, I mean, I doubt that HHS secretary is even aware of this stuff. If he really, if he was interested and this make America healthy again, which, you know, I'm not sure it was ever really healthy but if we want to get healthy this would be the work that we would get behind rather than just cutting everything yeah yeah yeah i just had a phd kevin clatt from uc berkeley talking about
Starting point is 01:18:01 how these cuts are impacting metabolic kitchens where research is being done on ultra-processed food the things that he's talking about there is no plan to actually find out this research that he claims to find like the idea that he's going to create an autism study that he will find an answer. I remember before he got put into the position he is now, he actually said that he'd get it in two months. Oh, yeah. Then he pushed it to September.
Starting point is 01:18:29 Now it's 2026. Yeah, but under pressure. But, you know, what you're saying is a great example. So Kevin Hall, who I look to as one of our top nutrition scientists based at NIH, he resigned in conflict with Kennedy because they wanted him to take. twist his report. Now, this is another big problem, Mike. So he had a paper coming out about the ultra-processed food. He's been a leader, a pioneer in this work showing us the problems. And the NIH in the new regime wouldn't allow him to communicate with the public. The New York
Starting point is 01:19:06 Times communicated him directly, but he was, and he sent the questions. But he had to have them alter them. They were altered. And they had to be what, what, what, RFK Jr. wanted on the ultra-processed food, which wasn't what the study showed. So they took his work and they manipulated and they ascribed it to him. They not only altered his answers, but they never said, well, we changed,
Starting point is 01:19:31 you know, Kevin Hall's answers. And this is beyond the beyond. You know, one thing is to have misinformation, but then to take a respected researcher who resigned or whatever you want to call retired because of this, This is just, I mean, profoundly unacceptable, and it was, it was called out transiently. We can't have this.
Starting point is 01:19:57 Whoever is left to do the work, we can't have them muzzled and we can't have their work being manipulated to support other hypotheses that are unproven. Yeah, and this is an administration that supposedly values scientific freedom. Oh, oh. there's a lot of things as you know that you know kind of dressed up yeah exactly which is not really the truth for sure uh and right now it seems like the predominant mission is to gut the monies that are supporting research and public health agencies and i don't know mike maybe you know where's all this money going it's a great question i don't know the answer to that but i know that the nihs
Starting point is 01:20:40 they need to do a better job at retaining researchers retaining dollars for research, just understanding how much money it takes to perform a two-week controlled metabolic study is incredible in order to do it correctly, not just to get the result that you want, because it's easy to get the result that you want if you're willing to cheat the science and not actually after the truth. So very problematic. I'm curious, how long until our medical establishment starts asking RFK to resign? It's a really important question. The problem with that is if you're a medical researcher and you sound off, then if you have any funding left, it's likely to be eviscerated.
Starting point is 01:21:26 And you will be a target. I mean, the problem right now is we are in a culture of fear. So that adds to it. You know, I give Kevin credit because he stood up and told the story and moved on. But we, you know, we have a few examples of that. most people have moved on quietly and you know many are looking for jobs and it would be hard to find a job in an academic center now because they're all in shrink mode so uh the problem of retribution the problem of organizing a movement and of course it's not just hHS it's part of an administration which has lots of common threads uh which is basically we went into a reckless i couldn't believe more that we could be smarter about our funding. That is, if you're going to spend $47 billion,
Starting point is 01:22:19 maybe you could get more out of that $47 billion. For sure. Let's promote more young people who many, too many older folks are getting all this funding. Right. And brilliant ideas, hyper-innovation. But that's not what we had here. No.
Starting point is 01:22:33 We had a reckless indiscriminate. We're going to cut thousands, 10,000 people. Before RFK Jr. even was elected the administration, he was saying, your bags, you know, on Twitter X, 10,000 of you are leaving or some crazy stuff. So that's the agenda. And in order to take that on, I mean, it's not just at HHS. It's much more challenging. And those who stand up and really are vociferous about it are likely to be facing retaliation. Yeah, I actually have friends in positions of C-suite execs for.
Starting point is 01:23:13 from major organizations, and they've seen my videos talking about their RFK Junior situation, and they say that they wanna be vocal, but their organization is not letting them because a lot of the grants they get are federally funded, and they're concerned about losing those grants, much like how you say, the fear of retribution is all across the board, even in private institutions.
Starting point is 01:23:32 No, it's really, will it go on for years? I don't know, but if it keeps up the velocity, what we've been seeing in the first, few months it's really a serious problem and eventually you know because of it we're already seeing kids with you know hospitalized with vitamin A liver toxicity who knows what else and we haven't even controlled the measles countrywide outbreak and what's next no less that so we're not in a good position right now and this is you know Senator Cassidy who was a deciding vote who trusted him saying, I believe in vaccines.
Starting point is 01:24:17 Well, he was worried about the same retribution, about getting funding against his campaign. Yeah. I mean, this is what we have now. Politics, trumping, science. Yeah. Pun intended. Yeah. Pun intended.
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Starting point is 01:25:28 Winners find fabulous for less. What's interesting is the RFK administration probably gets one thing wrong the most, and it's not HIV. It's not vaccines. it's they talk about this chronic health epidemic that we're experiencing that is true we're more obese than we've ever been we have higher rates of diabetes heart disease etc but they believe that is due to some sort of foreign entity as opposed to just overeating poor quality foods
Starting point is 01:25:59 and they think they can somehow stop that without a plan it's very hard to change someone's behavior. It's very hard to change private organizations' marketing behavior. In New York, we tried limiting the size of big sodas, and that got crushed. Michelle Obama tried to do the same on a major scale. Crushed. And yet, they're talking about as if it's easy to change human behavior without ever actually succeeding in changing human behavior. I think that's where they get things wrong the most, especially when it comes to the chronic health front. Yeah, no, I agree. We have the worst consumption highest consumption of ultra-processed foods in the world here in the U.S.
Starting point is 01:26:42 It has been tied to cancer, neurodegenerative, and cardiovascular diseases, type 2 diabetes, every bad outcome, right? Proportionate to the consumption. And kids is even higher than 70%. Now, what does it take to do something? It needs a plan. It also needs to take on the Department of Agriculture
Starting point is 01:27:03 and big food, which is basically a few companies that control our whole food intake. And RFK Jr. is an environmental lawyer. Yeah. If you're going to go after something, do that. You know, and I talked to Rob Caleb, who was a very close friend who was a commissioner twice
Starting point is 01:27:20 in the past and recent outgoing, and he says taking on USDA and big food is just really, really difficult because they're powerful forces. But, you know, if we want to see this would be an opportunity, have a plan where, you know, we're going to have much better warning education, getting, instead of, you know, a cockamamie food dye additive thing. We get serious about it because there is an opportunity here that some good could be made.
Starting point is 01:27:54 But we haven't seen any of that. There is no plan alley. It's all been very unknown about some of the things that this Maha movement has gotten. behind him, where are the deliberate steps that are going to make a difference? Because that's one that could really be useful. I mean, there are countries that have really gotten serious about this problem. We're not one of them. And by the way, as you know, regarding the U.S., because we have such ridiculous mismatch
Starting point is 01:28:30 of our expenditures for our healthy aging, for survival, for maternal mortality, for infant mortality. You know, wherever you look, we do so poorly. And there's an opportunity, it's hard to make it worse. But you gotta have a plan. And it's gotta be logical. So you can make it worse if you just cut all the funding. Yeah, you said, how can you possibly make this worse?
Starting point is 01:28:57 Well, we are the outlier country of all of the rich countries in the world. And we're not getting, we're going worse, not anywhere better. So, you know, here you have an opportunity, unidirectional. You can only make it better. But you've got to do something that is smart. Yeah. It reminds me of analogy how we just said,
Starting point is 01:29:16 if you're in the low socioeconomic space, you get worse health outcomes. High economic space, you could also get worse outcomes. America is that personified in some way. It is. You get hurt at both ends. Yeah, exactly. You really do.
Starting point is 01:29:30 And people don't understand about that being heard at the high end. Well, we're the perfect example. we're spending tons of money and not getting good outcomes. So I think that's a good example of it. And I also want the listeners and viewers to realize that this isn't, it's political in the sense that it's public health focused, but it's apolitical in that it's not about Dems or Republicans or moderates
Starting point is 01:29:51 because RFK Jr. was a Democrat not too long ago. Yes, yes. He's now part of a Republican administration. In 2020, when I was reaching out to Trump's first term administration, they sent Dr. Fauci to this podcast, so we worked with them then. Then when Biden came into office, we worked with their administration to get the Surgeon General and Dr. Fauci on. So we work with every political party.
Starting point is 01:30:18 It's just about telling the scientific truth and trying to do the best that you can with the limited information that we do have. So this is not a political attack in that sense, strictly public health focused. I think it's great. And you've had these conversations with folks, and it's without regard to the the politics. Well, we also have to remember that the COVID vaccine, which for the triumph that it was, is largely creating a lot of divisiveness and distrust in the general public, especially on the conservative side of things. And again, the anti-vaccine movement kind of started on the liberal
Starting point is 01:30:53 California granola side of things, and now it's progressed into the conservative. So again, showing the apolitical nature. But Donald Trump called it his vaccine? Yeah. Yeah. And now, The conservatives hate the vaccine. So it's very interesting how the sides flip back and forth, depending on whatever is at stake in a given time. Absolutely. I wanted to talk about and shift the conversation a bit to AI. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:31:20 In your book in 2019, Deep Medicine, you said how AI would revolutionize a doctor-patient relationship. It's 2025. My relationship with my patients has not been revolutionized. We have chat GPT responses, creating hallucinations in discharge instructions, and I'm getting really poor quality notes when I try and use the AI scribes from my patient encounters. Have I been premature in thinking that this was happening now, or is this a failure on AI's part? Well, there's a lot here.
Starting point is 01:31:59 It isn't just, you know, the AI scribe of a conversation. I don't know, you may be using Dax. No, a different one. A different one, okay. Some health systems like Emory and many others, they're using, and, you know, every doctor says they're two to three hours a day they're saving from having to work on a keyboard. That's great.
Starting point is 01:32:21 That's a beginning. But that's just one part of this, because that note of the conversation that synthetic note, not only is the record note, which is better than the notes that are typically made, but it can be used to do all the downstream things,
Starting point is 01:32:37 like... Connecting the... Follow-up appointments, prescriptions, tests, and anything that needs to be done, nudging the patients subsequently for things that were discussed, getting, of course, the audio record
Starting point is 01:32:52 and the links to the patient so they're not confused. It can also deal with the pre-authorization, which is a nightmare for lots of physicians. So that note, digitizing that encounter has lots of potential and it has been seen, you know, at least with some of these. And that's exciting, but that's just one part. The big thing, Mike, is that we have, well, on the patient doctor relationship,
Starting point is 01:33:17 we need to get the gift of time. As we talked about earlier, if you only have seven minutes with a patient or 12 minutes for a new patient, this is not time where you're going to get, talk about lifestyle you're going to listen to a patient's deep concerns where you interrupt them in eight seconds you know this is not the way you want a relationship AI has potential to get us there that is by making the appointments we have less time out of keyboard keyboard liberation more eye-to-eye contact and more trust and presence you know doing the exam that you really show that you know the laying of hands which is fundamental and also this engagement
Starting point is 01:33:57 with the patient, you know, at any time, ideally. So they have this, they know you have their back. Right. That isn't going to happen overnight, but we have an opportunity towards that. Now, beyond the patient doctor relationship, which has to go back long before you were born, like about twice your age, it was a precious, intimate relationship. Patient doctor, it was, you know, it was almost the relationship in medicine. Of course, that's changed drastically now.
Starting point is 01:34:27 eroded and it has to come back. But we also have other problems that AI is helping us with, like errors. We make serious diagnostic errors at the tune of 12 million a year in this country. And the Johns Hopkins study showed 800,000 people a year are either disabled or dead from these diagnostic errors. AI has tremendous opportunity there, not only from the scans, which you can see things that humans will never see. Let's go back to the arthroscopic score you're using, which has been the standard for decades. The chest x-ray was shown to be better with AI than that score
Starting point is 01:35:08 for predicting future cardiovascular events. For looking for calcified plaque? At everything, things that we can't see. Yeah, yeah, I mean, calcified plaque and medius dino fat pads I mean, things that we don't even, we can't see the pixels that the AI is analyzing. It's extraordinary. And we now can look at the retina,
Starting point is 01:35:30 and this is part of the AI prevention, and say in the next five years, even though you have no symptoms, you're going to have the beginnings of Alzheimer's, or kidney disease, or how are you controlling your diabetes, your blood pressure, whether you're going to have a heart attack or a stroke,
Starting point is 01:35:47 and 10 other things, from the retina or the kidney, or the cartogram, we can say, you know, anemia, what is your hemoglob? These are things humans can't see, can't possibly. I mean, I've been reading cartograms for decades. I can't tell you the age and sex, the ejection fraction, and all these other things,
Starting point is 01:36:05 whether you're going to develop atrial fibrillation, which is another reason why you should lose weight because this is not a good thing. So we have AI as a totally different method for reducing errors and seeing things that we can't see. Digital eyes, machine eyes, whatever you want to call them. And there's lots of other facets of AI, but to me the most exciting one is the super ageer story,
Starting point is 01:36:31 which is you take all your layers of data, and you're very young, but let's say you were 50, and you want to know you're at risk for one of these three age-related diseases. That's going to really change your health span. And we then get the right layers of data, AI, multimodal AI, analyzes it and says, guess what, you're not at risk, or guess what, it's just this condition that you're at risk for it, and when, and this is what we're going to do.
Starting point is 01:36:59 So we couldn't do this without AI. It's large language models, large reasoning models, and that's what makes this time so unique, is we have all this data dressed up to go nowhere. But with the AI, it makes it possible to be interesting. individual level data to help you, to coach you, to use your images, to AI analyze them, it's extraordinary, but it hasn't gotten into the medical practice. It will. I can say... What do you think the timeline for that is? Well, you know, a couple of the people who got the Nobel Prize in medicine like Demis and Sassabas and Jeffrey Hinton for their work in AI, they've endorsed
Starting point is 01:37:46 the book, and they see this proposal imminent. Now, Demas was on 60 Minutes just a couple weeks ago and said within a decade or so. I've learned through my mistakes, three books, where I try to predict the future of medicine, creative destruction, democratization, you know, digitization, and then AI, when it's going to take hold. It's always longer than you think. Medicine is a kind of sclerotic, ossified. Medical inertia. But sometimes for the good, of medicine. Yeah. Because it's easy to flip-flop too quickly.
Starting point is 01:38:19 Yeah, you don't want to jump. You want to see compelling evidence, and we don't have that for many things that we're talking about. That's why a plea to get that when you have the parts that look like the sum of the parts which look extraordinary. So let's get that.
Starting point is 01:38:33 But it takes longer than you think, and I think that we will get there. In your practice of medicine, in a couple of decades, you won't even talk about AI because it'll be completely embedded. Omnipresent everywhere. You will see many less patients in person.
Starting point is 01:38:52 You know, what did it take to get telemedicine in high gear, which I had been written about 14 years ago? Took a pandemic. Hopefully we don't need a pandemic to get these things moving or some other, you know, major catastrophe. But it takes longer, but it will happen. It's inevitable because we as humans, we as physicians, we're humans.
Starting point is 01:39:14 We can't deal with all this data. We're talking about billions of data points for any person, things that we will never see. And we have to say we need help lean on machines, right? And that's why in your, I would hope to see it, but I won't see it in my practice of medicine. But you will. And it's just a matter of time. Unfortunately, you know, it could be a couple of decades. It could be a little longer.
Starting point is 01:39:38 But it's a path that there is no other way to deal with the day. to get back, if you know a better way to get back to patient-doctor relationship, let me know, I mean, you know. Well, I mean, changing incentive structure for primary care and those things, I think we'll make an impact as well because right now primary care is not as celebrated as well as it should be in terms of creating a foundation
Starting point is 01:40:05 for one's health. A lot of young folks, especially in the urban areas, are relying for urging care centers to provide their primary care. And there's no way you're getting a doctor. No, no, not at all, but then the affluent can have concierge medicine. And then you get lots of time with your doctor and you have their cell phone number and text them and all.
Starting point is 01:40:25 Is that what we want? Is that the medicine we want for people here? So this is a real problem. And that's why we need to decompress. We need to give patients more charge. That's another reason where AI is kicking in, diagnosing all these common skin lesions, urinary tract infections, arrhythmia is, you know, ear infection. and children, those will all be done by AI.
Starting point is 01:40:47 Yeah. Okay, so the common reasons to go see a family physician, primary care physician, a lot of those that are not life-threatening, they're going to be done. Here's the AI. I have it, you know, validated by the physician for the prescription only. I don't have to go with a visit. You're going to see a lot more of those things in the next, you know, that's actually moving pretty quickly.
Starting point is 01:41:08 Yeah. Giving patients a virtual health coach, if they want it, if they want it, to help them, prevent the disease of interest, of concern. These are things that are happening now that will take a while to, you know, get proven. But I'm convinced with what I have seen so far, they will. And so the physician community doesn't like the idea of patients having more charge.
Starting point is 01:41:36 I mean, you as a young physician, you're willing to accept that. But older docs, like me, generally, I'm, I'm in control, control freak. I don't want them coming in with their sensor data and all this stuff they got from chat, GPT, 5, whatever stuff. I want to be the one calling the shots. That has to change.
Starting point is 01:41:58 You know, I'm giving the commencement address later this week at Sinai Medical School, and talking about this is that we are in a flux. We're not going to be picking doctors as Brainiacs with their best GPA score, you know, averages. and their MCAT scores, we need people, people, you know, that really are empathetic and compassionate. And I think that, I think, is going to be an important part of the next generation, along with the AI, along with the patients having more charge.
Starting point is 01:42:28 Yeah, I'm curious how the general public will land in terms of getting information from AI. And I'll give you one specific example that I find funny and sad at the same time. Elon Musk, head of Doge, or not head of Doge, I can't even keep track anymore, is endorsing RFK Jr. to some degree his notions of asking questions, his medical theories, etc., especially on his platform X. I ask Grock, which is the AI of X, what percentage of health claims that RFK Jr. makes are factually inaccurate. And it's at greater than 50%. Why isn't someone who's an industry leader like Elon Musk asking his own AI system about the factual accuracy of the person deciding the nation's health care? Yeah, it's amazing. Grockin's actually pretty good. And it's much
Starting point is 01:43:24 greater than 50% of course. But you're absolutely right. Why? So if people, like if he's not listening to that on such a huge stage, right? Is he going to listen to it? about his cholesterol score? It seems pretty unlikely, doesn't it? Yes, that's why I don't know. How will AI interface with the general public when it comes to the virtual health coach stuff? Well, I'm expecting that when that emerges
Starting point is 01:43:47 and is proven that it helps people and changes their natural history of these age-related diseases that it won't be in the current climate. Okay, got it. Because it can't be. We basically are upended everything. Right. But we'll get there.
Starting point is 01:44:02 I'm very optimistic that eventually the things, the promise that we see today, the ability to prevent the big three age-related diseases will be actualized. And it won't be at a time when we're at peak misinformation. But it will get back. I mean, too many times in history, there's been instability, maybe not as bad as this,
Starting point is 01:44:28 where, you know, we will get there. I just hope it's sooner than later. Yeah. to leave people with some actionable points if they want to be super agers what can they do well they should know all the details of lifestyle that means you know in terms of we don't just say exercise we're talking about not just aerobic but core strength training balance posture you know all the different things that are components of of fitness and it doesn't mean you have to be extreme as we discuss that's you know my colleague from Stanford you and Ashley said one minute of exercise like five
Starting point is 01:45:10 minutes of gain of healthy aging okay and there's something to that the data support that uh in large respect now um knowing about the sleep story and tracking it if you do are suspect as you say getting a sleep apnea is is it real because it's more common than a lot of people realize it can be easily treated prevented so that sleep thing and getting you know the the details, the regularity, the diet thing couldn't be more important. There's too many people that are not just the ultra-processed foods, but are this protein craze we're in now, eating lots of red meat, which is pro-inflammatory,
Starting point is 01:45:50 and knowing what foods are generally anti-inflammatory or not pro. And I know all the other things that we discussed. So everybody could do that, but I just know that familiarity with the details isn't enough. And I think if you have a family history of one of these three conditions, let's say it's my area, cardiovascular. So you had someone with a heart attack and your family parents or something like bypass surgery, something major,
Starting point is 01:46:21 and you have your LDL cholesterol checked. And you could even have inflammation proteins like CRP checked, whatever. Then the question is how aggressive you want to get, not just with the lifestyle factors, but do I just go with statins? Maybe I don't tolerate statins. A lot of people have that problem, particularly as they get older. Do I try to go as low? These are questions that are really important. And remember, when we learned that the determinants are not just your genetics, but largely non-genetics, that gives hope to people that I have so many patients that come into me, say, my father had a heart attack at 50.
Starting point is 01:47:03 I feel like I'm going to have a heart attack at 50. But we can change that because it's not just the genes here. And we have tools that didn't have before. We're going to have pills and treatments to lower L.P. little A, which we never had. We always would say all these years, you've got a really high LP. Little A too bad. It's nothing we can do. We're going to have, there's five drugs that are about to, you know, get across the goal line.
Starting point is 01:47:27 So our armamentarium has never been better. our ability to block inflammation. So it's just a matter how aggressive and having those layers of data together. Like, for example, you can get now a CT of the heart arteries and you can see by AI how much inflammation you have even without a blockage. And that's the kind of thing as we get using that more inexpensive,
Starting point is 01:47:56 very low radiation. people at higher risk could find out before they developed a plaque that was significant to use that as a metric. So that's just heart disease. Each of them have that type of edge. And that's why I think it's so exciting. We never had this kind of rich things to work with
Starting point is 01:48:17 to prevent the diseases, even though we dreamt about it forever. Yeah, it's very exciting. And I'm glad that you're pointing out that there's a duality here, not a false dichotomy. It's not just lifestyle or medication. It's lifestyle for everyone.
Starting point is 01:48:32 And for who benefits, high risk, who needs an added layer, medication is definitely an option. And all of these breakthroughs that we have from a technological standpoint will help us better risk stratify who is high risk, who would benefit from earlier intervention
Starting point is 01:48:47 so that we don't have to treat heart attacks. We can prevent those heart attacks. And I think that's very valuable. Yeah, and I think it's important, Mike, just to emphasize, there's one big hole in the story, and that is we don't have an immunome. That is, if we want to assess an immune system of a patient today,
Starting point is 01:49:05 what do we have? It's 2025. And we have CBC, that's about it. CBC, the ratio of the white blood cell neutrophils to lymphocyte. That is a cockamamie way to a jet. I mean, we know so much about antibodies and B and T cell function, NK cells, all these other components. dendritic cells, and we don't assess any of it
Starting point is 01:49:28 in the clinic, any of it. And look, we just went through. Well, is that because it's so ever-changing and responsive to the environment? That would be hard to... No, it's part of it, but you can do the perturbations to simulate that in the lab.
Starting point is 01:49:40 So you can see, you can give, you know, all sorts of ways to see how does your T-cell respond to this or that and B-cells and auto-inibodies. So in the book, I have in the last chapter, kind of the beginning of the end. you know, where I had a Johns Hopkins spin-out test that every auto-inibody,
Starting point is 01:50:00 every virus that I've ever been exposed to in my life and some surprises there. I never had CMV exposure where most adults have had that. And there's links to all these different, like F. Dean Barr. Yeah, I've heard, yeah. With multiple sclerosis,
Starting point is 01:50:15 if you have the right genetic predisposition. So we're going to get there, and it's not that hard, and there are many beginning to see the shots on goal. That's the thing, be the big three age-related diseases are very much dependent on a intact immune system, not too heavy, strong, and not unguarded. We could probably not get metastatic cancer if our immune system really kicked in.
Starting point is 01:50:41 Right. And we have ways to, the beauty of the current day today is that we can reinstat up and down the immune system. Right. We could give like shingles vaccines. Today is the fourth study to show shingles vaccine lowers the risk of dementia and Alzheimer's disease. Well, who would have guessed that?
Starting point is 01:51:02 Well, it's revving up our immune system. So it's a two-for. A lot of people aren't getting them because of the anti-vaccine movement. And they works, well, again, shingles, too, to the 20-plus percent. By the way, yeah, 95 some percent. And, you know, 20, 25 percent reduction of dementia, Alzheimer's,
Starting point is 01:51:19 and that's nothing to snicker at. So we're learning how to rev up and down the immune system to take control, that's the other part of this. We got to really get that down so that when we see patients in clinic, we can say, you know, immune system, you know, it's great, or that's... Yeah, we'd love to get that. I am shocked that this day, in age, we are not there yet, but I think it's not far around the corner.
Starting point is 01:51:45 Yeah, I think it's changing. And I think the notion of hygiene hypothesis means something different to my generation, because hygiene hypothesis used to be that you don't challenge your immune system with non-pathological microbes, so therefore your immune system perhaps overreacts. But I think about that in terms of exercise. If you're hygienic, you're not exercising. And when you're not exercising, you're not creating inflammation. You're not challenging your immune system.
Starting point is 01:52:12 Because inflammation during exercise is modulated by your immune system. So I feel like the immune system plays such a wider role than just a typical protection from bacteria or viruses or fungi in so many variables, whether it's exercise, cancer risk, bone health, et cetera. Oh, you nailed it. I mean, exercise across the board, it is how you keep your immune system intact, especially as we age.
Starting point is 01:52:39 As we get older, we have this immunosiniscence problem, and some people not. I mean, the super agers, one of my patients presented in the book, I'm sure her immune system is incredible, But many of us, it really dips and we need to, you know, get it back up. And it's a little bit of a Goldilocks story. You don't want to get so self-attacking. Yeah, boosting the immune system.
Starting point is 01:53:01 But you also don't want to get it where you have your guard down and then that's when you get in trouble. With the opportunity to stick. Yes, yes. So this area, if we can, it's going to demand more research, that is the piece. And of course, after the brain, the immune system is the most complex. system in our body. And so, again, you can't deal with all that data if you don't have AI. That's true. That's true. I want to end up one point that I experience a lot of frustration within my practice. And being a cardiologist, you probably have a very strong stance on this.
Starting point is 01:53:36 Young people, 30 years old, will come to my office and say their Apple Watch ding that they had five seconds of AFib. I know what to do with AFIB and someone who's symptomatic, who has risk factors based on their little calculation scores that we do. do? What are we supposed to tell the general public with all these trackers that are at play where we don't have definitive data on what to do yet? Yeah, that's a great one. So this smart watch-based diagnosis of HRFib was the first consumer AI deep learning ever authorized by the FDA. So what you bring up is a quandary because if they're symptomatic, it's easy. Yes. But then you have to get
Starting point is 01:54:19 ideally the PDF of that from the person's watch where you actually look is this really atrial fib right and five seconds that's very transient right but if it's sustained then you want to say okay are there structural reasons where if that person is an atrial fib let's say they have a valve abnormality right let's say their left atrium is really enlarge are they more likely to develop a blood clot that would you know go to their brain where they would need blood thin Because really the story is if it's transient, but if it's sustained and if it's in a person who has risk for stroke, then it's a whole different matter. See, you have to sort out which it is. Oftentimes that will require an echocardiogram.
Starting point is 01:55:04 I do those in the clinic with a smartphone. Focus, yeah. Yeah, I mean, who needs to send somebody for a formal echocardium unless it's something, you know, pretty severe? But not enough doctors are using smartphone echoes or ultrasounds, but they should. It's the modern stethoscope, and it's much more revealing. So that would be the thing to do is get that smartphone ultrasound echo or get a formal echo and then sort it out, but only if it was sustained. Five beats, but if it's gone on for many minutes, even, you know, this could be the person
Starting point is 01:55:41 doesn't experience it, but it could be a matter that's worth at least looking into. It's not something to be largely ignored if it's sustained. Right, yeah. I've had companies come to me asking to do a sponsorship on the YouTube channel, and they have a new product that is sensing atrial fibrillation in the general population, and they said this is a great breakthrough. But every piece of literature that I've looked at to see if screening the general population for atrial fibrillation was valuable, it was found either insufficient or perhaps not valuable.
Starting point is 01:56:12 What's your take on screening the general population for AFIP? Well, I wouldn't screen the general population, but I think if you were to go, there have been some more recent studies to say if you take people at higher risk, over, let's say, 60, obesity, which is a significant risk rate for fibrillation, heavy alcohol.
Starting point is 01:56:32 Diabetes, well, we have the chat score. Chats bask, too. If those people, you want to look, it's just like you were saying. But that's not screening anymore, I feel like that's already targeted. Yeah, there's ways that you can put, you know, two fingers on a credit card type thing and get the answer pretty quick if they're in it that
Starting point is 01:56:50 moment right that's a type of screen that's been used like countrywide in australia and you get like 1% of people that don't even know it and they're in chronic atrial fibrillation um so it is worth knowing if it's sustained um but we don't really have a good approach yet to do that uh i i check again, in every patient I see in clinic, I do a six-lead cartogram from two fingers on the left leg. I mean, it's just get so much information. And sometimes I find people just at that moment,
Starting point is 01:57:24 they didn't know it, an atrial fibmin, and then we sort things out. But it's not something that once you find out about it that you want to turn your back on. The question is how deep do you want to find it? Yeah. And finding it in young people is very unlikely to mean something.
Starting point is 01:57:39 Finding in people of, you know, beyond a certain age where it could, and most people don't realize that weight loss is a great way. Great way. I mean, who would a guess, right? Limiting alcohol intake. There's a lot of valuable. The belly reservoir of inflammation is mediating the heart's propensity for this arrhythmia. That was a wake-up call.
Starting point is 01:57:59 And, of course, then, you know, where's the Glyp1 drugs to try to reduce that? I put several patients on those drugs because they weren't able to lose weight otherwise and their atrial fibrillation was something that we didn't want to have to go do an ablation, but we could actually get rid of it just from lifestyle. And you've seen remission from those individuals. Wow, that's great.
Starting point is 01:58:21 Okay. Yeah, yeah. I haven't seen data on that. That's cool. But yeah, I couldn't take the sponsorship because I couldn't put out the message that a 30-year-old will need to screen themselves for AFib. So I didn't want to, because that's the question.
Starting point is 01:58:36 When they want me to market it, they don't want me to say, hey, this is only for this specific subgroup that I'm meeting into their sales. So I'm telling, I would be telling the audience, everyone should be taking this. And I don't think that's where we are. Well, I admire you for that. There's not enough of that. But look, Apple, when they put this thing out, everyone, whatever age who has an Apple watch could do this.
Starting point is 01:58:56 That's bad. They basically did it. Yeah, exactly. And that's a problem. Yeah. I have a lot of worried well because of that. You got these people with false alarms, or maybe they had the five beats, and this is creating a lot of unnecessary visits because they didn't say, unless you have risk. They wanted everyone to use this app and how...
Starting point is 01:59:16 Well, because if it saves one life, that's a great press story. Yeah, and they've used that. They use that one person many times. Yeah, exactly. Yeah. So, well, I guess that's what the future holds for us, balance, being honest, transparent, and learning from our mistakes moving forward. Yeah, I couldn't agree more. It's really been a joy to discuss all this with you
Starting point is 01:59:37 because it's refreshing, actually. Yeah, it's very exciting. Thank you for your time. Dr. Topal, the next time you're excited to talk about a subject in this space. We're happy to have you on once again. Oh, thanks. I'll look forward to that chance. Where would you like the audience to follow along your journey?
Starting point is 01:59:53 Well, I'm really happy about the Super Agers book if they're interested in trying to promote healthy aging. I'm on X in blue sky, but the main thing I do is the substact ground truce. And so every week I try to put out a newsletter and sometimes also podcasts to what's hot, what's exciting. And this is where I got into recently P-Tau 217, these longevity companies that don't have really the foundation for their claims. But sometimes, you know, it's like the mechanism of deep sleep and of how.
Starting point is 02:00:29 how it's great for brain health. So I try to cover things that most people aren't, they're not covered in the mainstream media, high quality media, and they're really interesting, often on a science level, and hopefully at a level that people understand, I always could do better than that, that is to get it to use no language that someone would question.
Starting point is 02:00:49 Well, that's what AI's great for. Yeah, yeah, but I try to share, and again, going back to our early discussion, if we all did that, we all would get smarter quicker, and I'll keep doing it because I just think sharing useful information to people. I wish I'd started it when I was, you know, 50, when I was involved with the whole Vioxx thing. I wish I'd started when I was 30 or whenever you did
Starting point is 02:01:16 because the impact you'll have and other young people will be much more profound. Yeah. Yeah, I remember even reading your work on cardiac cath labs overstenting people. And it kind of reminds me that it feels like longevity, clinics are now the modern-day cat labs. Yeah, yeah. They're gouging people. I had the gouging, gauging, stents.
Starting point is 02:01:38 We have that analogy is quite apropos. Cool. Well, thank you so much for your time, Dr. Topol. Appreciate it. Oh, thank you. Call me Eric. Huge thanks again to Dr. Topal for traveling to New York City for this interview and for constantly setting their record straight when it comes to health misinformation on
Starting point is 02:01:54 social media. Authoritative voices like his are more important than ever. and I'm really happy today that he admitted that a lot of the science that we discuss in longevity is for future research, not necessarily to be implemented today. He was also quite critical of Brian Johnson, who is attempting to be the oldest living person of all time. I actually interviewed Brian on the show, so scroll back to find that episode and see how he reacted to my criticisms. It got a little tense, so I think it's a fun listen. If you enjoyed this episode, please don't hesitate to give us five stars and leave a comment or review,
Starting point is 02:02:27 as it's one of the best ways to help new listeners to find the show. And as always, stay happy and healthy.

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