Search for a command to run...

Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
Dr. Eric Topol, a cardiologist at Scripps and one of the most cited living scientists in medicine, joins Adam Grant to debunk longevity myths and share evidence-based insights on extending healthspan. The episode explores Topol's groundbreaking "welderly" research, which surprisingly found minimal genetic differences between extremely healthy 85+ year-olds and those with typical age-related diseases. (04:31) The conversation covers the pseudoscience plaguing the longevity industry, evidence-based prevention strategies for the "big three" diseases (Alzheimer's, cancer, and cardiovascular disease), and the promising role of AI in medicine. Topol emphasizes that we have a crucial 20-year window to prevent these diseases and argues for a shift from reactive treatment to proactive prevention. (15:57)
Eric Topol is a cardiologist at Scripps and a prolific researcher with over 1,300 publications, making him one of the 10 most cited living scientists in medicine. He is the author of "SuperAgers" and other books on the intersection of technology and medicine, and he runs a popular Substack on medical research and AI developments.
Adam Grant is an organizational psychologist at Wharton and the host of the TED podcast "WorkLife." He is a bestselling author known for books like "Think Again" and "Originals," and is recognized for his research on motivation, generosity, and rethinking assumptions.
Topol's seven-year study of 1,400 "welderly" individuals (85+ years old with no medical conditions or medications) revealed that genetics aren't the primary driver of extreme healthspan. (04:51) Despite sequencing entire genomes, researchers found minimal genetic differences between these super-healthy elders and typical aging individuals. This surprising finding suggests that lifestyle factors and immune system health are more controllable determinants of aging well than previously thought. The key insight is that most welderly participants had family members who died 20 years younger, indicating that superior genes weren't inherited. Instead, their remarkable immune systems—likely shaped by lifestyle choices—appear to be the distinguishing factor.
Rather than treating diseases after they manifest, Topol advocates for preventing Alzheimer's, cancer, and cardiovascular disease during the crucial 20-year development window. (15:57) Each of these diseases takes approximately two decades to develop before symptoms appear, providing an unprecedented opportunity for intervention. The strategy involves identifying high-risk individuals through polygenic risk scores, genome sequencing, and advanced biomarkers, then implementing targeted prevention protocols. This represents a fundamental shift from medicine's reactive approach to a proactive prevention model that could dramatically improve population health outcomes.
The longevity industry is flooded with pseudoscientific products that prey on people's desire to extend healthspan. (08:56) Topol specifically calls out expensive longevity clinics charging up to $250,000 for unproven treatments like plasmapheresis, hyperbaric oxygen, and stem cell therapy. Anti-aging supplements, total body MRIs for healthy individuals, and excessive protein consumption ("bro science") all lack meaningful scientific support. For healthy people eating a balanced diet, most vitamins and supplements provide marginal benefits at best, with the exception of addressing specific deficiencies identified through medical testing. The key is demanding rigorous, independently replicated research before adopting any longevity intervention.
Rather than obsessing over specific heart rate zones, the evidence supports a balanced exercise program that includes aerobic activity, resistance training, and balance work. (23:37) Topol emphasizes that simply moving consistently matters more than achieving ultra-high levels of extreme physical activity, which may even be harmful. The key components are: regular aerobic exercise for cardiovascular health, resistance training for core and upper body strength (which you don't get from walking or cycling), and balance training to maintain proprioception as you age. The most important factor is making exercise enjoyable through music, friends, or entertainment so you maintain consistency rather than perfection.
Artificial intelligence is poised to revolutionize medical diagnosis and treatment, potentially functioning like an autopilot system that augments rather than replaces physician judgment. (32:38) Topol compares medical AI to autonomous vehicles—highly effective in controlled conditions but requiring human oversight for complex or unpredictable situations. Patients can already benefit from feeding their health data into AI tools for additional analysis and second opinions, especially given that there are 12 million major diagnostic errors annually in the US. The technology promises to return the "gift of time" to physician-patient relationships by handling routine analysis, allowing doctors to focus on complex decision-making and patient care.