Horvath told Time that living to 150 will someday be a reality — though he isn’t sure exactly when. “I have no doubt it will happen,” Horvath said, pointing to rapid advances in measuring and potentially reversing the biological aging process. Horvath, who built the first widely used epigenetic “aging clocks,” said the ability to precisely measure biological age has transformed longevity research, allowing scientists to test whether treatments actually slow — or reverse — the aging process rather than merely treating disease.
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