I thought this was an informative post, but for many of these compounds the simple "life extension" metric is the one that is least interesting to me.
I have no problem dying in my 80s or 90s, but I just want to ensure that as much as possible that I have a solid mind and body right up until I die. For example, my father has been taking metformin for nearly 30 years after surviving a heart attack in his 50s (he has type 2 diabetes). He's now in his mid 80s and has basically no significant cognitive decline, despite that his father and both of his brothers had severe dementia when they died. Obviously this is just one anecdote and I'm not arguing anything about the specifics of metformin, I'm just saying that the fact he is able to enjoy such an active life in his 80s is the biggest gift - if he died tomorrow I think he and all of his family would just be so grateful at the vibrant life he had.
Heck, for me I'd be fine with a drug that slightly reduced my lifespan if it gave me better quality of life up until the end.
I have no problem dying in my 80s or 90s, but I just want to ensure that as much as possible that I have a solid mind and body right up until I die. For example, my father has been taking metformin for nearly 30 years after surviving a heart attack in his 50s (he has type 2 diabetes). He's now in his mid 80s and has basically no significant cognitive decline, despite that his father and both of his brothers had severe dementia when they died. Obviously this is just one anecdote and I'm not arguing anything about the specifics of metformin, I'm just saying that the fact he is able to enjoy such an active life in his 80s is the biggest gift - if he died tomorrow I think he and all of his family would just be so grateful at the vibrant life he had.
Heck, for me I'd be fine with a drug that slightly reduced my lifespan if it gave me better quality of life up until the end.