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Epigenetic GrimAge Test

GrimAge, our Epigenetic Age Test, predicts your biological age, based on DNA methylation, basically changes in your DNA over time.

Includes:

At-Home Collection Kit

Advanced Healthy Aging Report

1-on-1 Report Review and Portal Onboarding

Price
$325.00

About the test:

GrimAge, our Epigenetic Age Test, predicts your biological age, based on DNA methylation, basically changes in your DNA over time.

Specifically, for our epigenetic age test, we use GrimAge (an Epigenetic Clock), which has been found to strongly correlate with biological age and shown to be a predictor of morbidity and mortality. In fact, GrimAge has outperformed all other epigenetic or DNA methylation clocks. 

Developed in the Horvath lab at UCLA using historical biobank data from large population studies and validated in large independent studies across a wide variety of human cell types and tissues.

Beyond biological age, our epigenetic testing also predicts your immune system status and enables monitoring of immunosenescence (immune system aging).

Test requires a blood sample from a home kit collection and takes as little as 5-10 minutes, which is then returned for processing by express mail. You will obtain a single epigenetic age test with results in 4-6 weeks from the time of collection.

What’s Included:

At-Home Blood Collection Kit from Tasso and Clock Foundation.

Advanced Healthy Aging and Longevity Report with recommendations based on biological age and most advanced epigenetic risk factor assessment tools available today.

1:1 Consult with our team to explain your report and personalized recommendations, for onboarding to the web portal. 

Monthly Research Group Meetings available to discuss new treatments and trials.  

References:

Lu, A. T., Quach, A., Wilson, J. G., Reiner, A. P., Aviv, A., Raj, K. et al. (2019). DNA methylation GrimAge strongly predicts lifespan and healthspan. Aging (Albany NY), 11(2), 303.

McCrory, C., Fiorito, G., Hernandez, B., Polidoro, S., O’Halloran, A. M., Hever, A. et al. (2021). GrimAge outperforms other epigenetic clocks in the prediction of age-related clinical phenotypes and all-cause mortality. The Journals of Gerontology: Series A, 76(5), 741-749.