Longevity medicine: what can we expect in 2026?

In an interview with Dr. Eric Verdin, President and CEO of the Buck Institute for Research on Aging, and Chair of the Scientific Advisory Board of Longevity Center Europe, during his recent visit to Poland, we discuss what is to be expected in the field in 2026.

Our discussion focused on the maturation of aging research into an emerging clinical discipline. Public interest in longevity is increasing rapidly in both the US and Europe, driven by improved understanding of aging biology, preventive medicine, and the expansion of specialized longevity clinics.

We discussed the rise of longevity clinics and the urgent need to connect cutting-edge research with real human applications, without compromising scientific rigor. Dr. Verdin emphasized that the future of longevity depends on strong clinical trials, shared data, and collaboration between researchers and practitioners.

Dr. Verdin emphasized the importance of translational rigor, connecting mechanistic insights from aging research with human clinical trials. Recent non-human primate studies demonstrating partial biological rejuvenation through stem-cell-based approaches underscore the therapeutic potential, while also highlighting the necessity of reproducibility, safety, and long-term follow-up.
A key theme was the need for structured collaboration between research institutes and longevity clinics, including shared physiological and biomarker data, to better understand human aging trajectories.

As the field becomes increasingly commercialized, maintaining scientific integrity and evidence-based standards will be critical to ensuring that longevity medicine delivers measurable clinical value.
The next phase of aging research will be defined not by promises, but by data, trials, and outcomes.

Author

Joanna Bensz

Founder and CEO, Longevity Center CEO, International Institute of Longevity

Joanna Bensz

Founder and CEO, Longevity Center CEO, International Institute of Longevity
Joanna Bensz is a precursor in developing pathway of modern prevention in healthcare and longevity.

Having spend 20+ years in managing and growing international and Fortune 500 companies across Central and Eastern Europe, Joanna co-founded International Institute of Longevity, bringing together international experts in age science, preventive health and longevity economy contributing to development of the sector in Europe.

At the end of 2019 together with Prince Michael of Liechtenstein, she opened first Longevity Center in CEE, a boutique preventive health and longevity company, that focuses on scientifically and medically advanced technologies and protocols for healthy longevity and sustainable health. Center is focusing on preventive health and lifestyle interventions based on in-depth diagnostics, epigenetics and biomarkers of biological age. In January 2022 LC opened its first center in Germany.

International education in Strategic and International Marketing complemented with Advanced Leadership Program at IESE, University of Navarra in Barcelona.

Member of Business and Innovation sub-group of the Strategic Advisory Board of Longevity International, All Party Parliamentary Group for Longevity in the UK. President of the Longevity Vaduz Roundtable in Liechtenstein.

She is considered one of ‘Top-50 Women in Longevity ‘ by Aging Analytics Agency.

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