It will tell you how long you can
live, provided it all works perfectly.
Unfortunately that is not so easy and I suspect that this will merely
tell you if you are below or above average at the moment.
Much more valuable are protocols
that repair telomeres and actually show signs even of reversing or at least stabilizing
the effect.
In the end, this will be driven
by insurance companies who will be better able to price their product risk
profile. It will be valuable when these
companies are taking on the larger underwriting risks.
I also suspect that chronic low
level risk profiles will show up better, if that item about stress holds true. Once the insurance industry organizes the statistics we may well be able to even discern the direct effects of tobacco and the like.
The £400 test that tells you how long you'll live
DNA breakthrough heralds new medical era – and opens ethical Pandora's
box
By Steve Connor, Science Editor
Monday, 16 May 2011
The results of the tests might also be of interest to companies
offering life-insurance policies or medical cover that depend on a person's
lifetime risk of falling seriously ill or dying prematurely.
A blood test that can show how fast someone is ageing – and offers the
tantalising possibility of estimating how long they have left to live – is to
go on sale to the general public in Britain later this year.
The controversial test measures vital structures on the tips of a
person's chromosomes, called telomeres, which scientists believe are one of the
most important and accurate indicators of the speed at which a person is
ageing.
Scientists behind the €500 (£435) test said it will be possible to tell
whether a person's "biological age", as measured by the length of
their telomeres, is older or younger than their actual chronological age.
Medical researchers believe that telomere testing will become
widespread within the next five or 10 years, but there are already some
scientists who question its value and whether there should be stronger ethical
controls over its wider use. In addition to concerns about how people will
react to a test for how "old" they really are, some scientists are
worried that telomere testing may be hijacked by unscrupulous organisations
trying to peddle unproven anti-ageing remedies and other fake elixirs of life.
The results of the tests might also be of interest to companies
offering life-insurance policies or medical cover that depend on a person's
lifetime risk of falling seriously ill or dying prematurely. However, there is
a growing body of scientific opinion that says testing the length of a person's
telomeres could provide vital insights into the risk of dying prematurely from
a range of age-related disorders, from cardiovascular disease to Alzheimer's
and cancer. "We know that people who are born with shorter telomeres than
normal also have a shorter lifespan. We know that shorter telomeres can cause a
shorter lifespan," said Maria Blasco of the Spanish National Cancer
Research Centre in Madrid ,
who is the inventor of the new commercial telomere test. "But we don't
know whether longer telomeres are going to give you a longer lifespan. That's
not really known in humans," she added.
"What is new about this test is that it is very precise. We can
detect very small differences in telomere length and it is a very simple and
fast technique where many samples can be analysed at the same time. Most
importantly, we are able to determine the presence of dangerous telomeres –
those that are very short."
Dr Blasco's company, Life Length, is in talks with medical diagnostic
companies across Europe, including the UK, to market the test and collect blood
samples for analysis in Spain .
A deal with a company operating in Britain is likely within a year,
she said.
"We need to have a clinical company to send us the blood
[samples]. We are in contact with several groups in the UK who are interested," Dr
Blasco said.
Life Length is anticipating hundreds of requests from people wanting to
have their telomeres tested and is expecting demand from thousands more once
the company is able to bring down the cost of the test as public demand
increases.
Although Life Length is not the only company selling telomere tests, it
is the only one gearing up for over-the-counter sales to the public and the
only company with an accurate-enough test to be of practical use, said
Professor Jerry Shay of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Centre in
Dallas.
"This test devised by Blasco is so accurate that it is likely to
provide more useful information than some of the other tests out there right
now," said Professor Shay, who is a scientific consultant for Life Length.
"What's important in ageing is the shortest telomeres. What makes cells
stop growing is the shortest telomeres, not the average telomere length, which
is what other tests look at.
"Everyone talks about the chronological age, but there is also a
biological age, and telomere length is actually a pretty good representation of
your biological age. Telomeres are important – there is no question of
that," he said.
Asked why the general public would be interested in taking a telomere
test, Dr Shay said: "I think people are just basically curious about their
own mortality. If you ask people what they worry about, most people would say
they are worried about dying."
He added: "People might say 'If I know I'm going to die in 10 years
I'll spend all my money now', or 'If I'm going to live for 40 more years I'll
be more conservative in my lifestyle'. The worrying thing is that if this
information ever got to a point where it is believable, insurance companies
would start requiring it in terms of insuring people.
"If you smoke or you're obese your insurance rates are higher, and
if you have short telomeres your insurance rates might be higher too."
Scientists do not yet believe they can narrow down the test prediction
to calculate the exact number of months and years a person has yet to live, but
several studies have indicated that individuals with telomeres that shorter
than normal are likely to die younger than those with longer telomeres.
Telomere research is considered to be one of the most exciting areas in
biomedical science and last year the Nobel Prize in medicine was shared between
three scientists who are pioneers in the field.
Interestingly, one of the Nobel laureates, Elizabeth Blackburn of the University of California San
Francisco , is an enthusiastic proponent of telomere testing
while another of the prize-winners, Carol Greider of Harvard Medical
School , is more sceptical
of its benefits.
"Do I think it's useful to have a bunch of companies offering to
measure telomere length so people can find out how old they are? No," Dr
Greider recently told the journal Science.
Dr Blasco, a former post-doctoral student in Dr Greider's laboratory,
is more certain of the benefits. "It will be useful for you to know your
biological age and maybe to change your lifestyle habits if you find you have
short telomeres," she said.
Telomeres: a short history
* 2003 Scientists studying 20-year-old blood samples from 143 people
show that telomere length is good indicator of whether someone is likely to
live for 15 years or more once they reach 60.
* 2004 Women living with stress of having a sick child are found to
have shorter telomeres. Other research suggests that meditation or other forms
of stress reduction may lengthen telomeres.
* 2007 Study of men in Scotland
shows those with the longest telomeres were half as likely to develop heart
disease than those with shorter telomeres. Telomere length was as good as
cholesterol levels at predicting the risk of developing cardiovascular disease.
* 2009 Short telomeres linked with inherited bone marrow disease.
* 2010 GM mice with no telomerase, an enzyme that elongates telomeres
in some cells, age prematurely compared to normal mice. The ageing effects were
reversed after injections of telomerase.
* 2011 Study of civil servants in the UK shows that those with few
educational qualifications have shorter telomeres than those with higher
educational qualifications. People with poor backgrounds are known to age
faster and suffer more age-related diseases.
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