Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Science

Saudi Arabia Plans To Spend $1 Billion a Year Discovering Treatments To Slow Aging (technologyreview.com) 83

Anyone who has more money than they know what to do with eventually tries to cure aging. Google founder Larry Page has tried it. Jeff Bezos has tried it. Tech billionaires Larry Ellison and Peter Thiel have tried it. Now the kingdom of Saudi Arabia, which has about as much money as all of them put together, is going to try it. From a report: The Saudi royal family has started a not-for-profit organization called the Hevolution Foundation that plans to spend up to $1 billion a year of its oil wealth supporting basic research on the biology of aging and finding ways to extend the number of years people live in good health, a concept known as "health span." The sum, if the Saudis can spend it, could make the Gulf state the largest single sponsor of researchers attempting to understand the underlying causes of aging -- and how it might be slowed down with drugs. The foundation hasn't yet made a formal announcement, but the scope of its effort has been outlined at scientific meetings and is the subject of excited chatter among aging researchers, who hope it will underwrite large human studies of potential anti-aging drugs.

The fund is managed by Mehmood Khan, a former Mayo Clinic endocrinologist and the onetime chief scientist at PespsiCo, who was recruited to the CEO job in 2020. "Our primary goal is to extend the period of healthy lifespan," Khan said in an interview. "There is not a bigger medical problem on the planet than this one." The idea, popular among some longevity scientists, is that if you can slow the body's aging process, you can delay the onset of multiple diseases and extend the healthy years people are able to enjoy as they grow older. Khan says the fund is going to give grants for basic scientific research on what causes aging, just as others have done, but it also plans to go a step further by supporting drug studies, including trials of "treatments that are patent expired or never got commercialized."

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Saudi Arabia Plans To Spend $1 Billion a Year Discovering Treatments To Slow Aging

Comments Filter:
  • by RobinH ( 124750 ) on Tuesday June 07, 2022 @03:34PM (#62600980) Homepage

    Anyone who has more money than they know what to do with eventually tries to cure aging. Google founder Larry Page has tried it. Jeff Bezos has tried it. Tech billionaires Larry Ellison and Peter Thiel have tried it.

    What is this B.S.? So, a billionaire putting money into researching how to extend healthy human lifespan is now bad... because it's a billionaire doing it? Is this the new msmash logic? Since it's bad that there are billionaires, then anything a billionaire wants to do is necessarily bad, and therefore researching age extension is bad? Really?

    I can't imagine how contorted your thinking must be to sit there on your couch connecting to your Starlink internet, opening Google Chrome and going to Amazon to order a big roll of bristol board and paint so you can make a big sign to protest how these billionaires have made your life so miserable.

    • If only I had mod points. A virtual +1 for you!

      It's amazing how the world has decided that no matter how a rich person spends their money, it is wrong and bad.

      • From what I know about rich people, most of them are unethical at best and what most could consider immoral at worst. They live on another planet, and most only care about furthering their wealth or ego (who wouldn't, but still)

    • by Shaeun ( 1867894 )

      Anyone who has more money than they know what to do with eventually tries to cure aging. Google founder Larry Page has tried it. Jeff Bezos has tried it. Tech billionaires Larry Ellison and Peter Thiel have tried it.

      What is this B.S.? So, a billionaire putting money into researching how to extend healthy human lifespan is now bad... because it's a billionaire doing it? Is this the new msmash logic? Since it's bad that there are billionaires, then anything a billionaire wants to do is necessarily bad, and therefore researching age extension is bad? Really?

      I can't imagine how contorted your thinking must be to sit there on your couch connecting to your Starlink internet, opening Google Chrome and going to Amazon to order a big roll of bristol board and paint so you can make a big sign to protest how these billionaires have made your life so miserable.

      If they make it so I can live forever and have to WORK forever, it will make my eternal life incredibly horrible. I want to retire!

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by GameboyRMH ( 1153867 )

      It's not bad because billionaires are doing it, it's bad because it can lead to the rich living longer than everyone else since anti-aging treatments will be costly elective procedures. This would only exacerbate inequality further.

      I can't imagine how contorted your thinking must be to sit there on your couch connecting to your Starlink internet, opening Google Chrome and going to Amazon to order a big roll of bristol board and paint so you can make a big sign to protest how these billionaires have made your life so miserable.

      Because all that technology didn't make the person's life better in any meaningful way, and they'd probably trade it all in for affordable health care and/or housing and/or a livable wage because picking up a bristol board and paint at the local hardware store wasn't bad at all?

      • by twocows ( 1216842 ) on Tuesday June 07, 2022 @04:14PM (#62601122)
        The cost might be prohibitive to begin with, maybe. As our ability to produce these treatments at scale increases, the cost will come down. Almost everything has an early adopter tax; I don't see how this is any different.

        I don't know about the rest of his rant, but I'm strongly in favor of anti-aging research. Aging is causally linked to untold numbers of extremely painful and debilitating illnesses; finding a way to counter this would be beneficial to all of humanity. My mom passed in a particularly painful and awful way in 2016, my dad passed to heart issues and having his lungs fill with fluid last month. These kinds of illnesses are far less likely to occur in a younger person and if they do occur the body is much more able to fight them off.

        There would certainly be associated problems, but in my opinion, the potential to substantially decrease human suffering outweighs having to tackle the inevitable problems. As far as people making claims about living forever or whatever, I would much rather choose when to go out on my own terms (or not at all, if I so choose) than be forced to go out in misery well ahead of when I want to. I see no problem at all with giving people more power over their own terminus. It's also why I support right to die -- again, both my parents' deaths inform this position.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by GameboyRMH ( 1153867 )

          I'm worried that the early expensive phase of life extension technology could change the world in a way that prevents the treatment from ever being affordable. Right now death is the great equalizer, you can't take it with you as they say, and look at how much a few still want to amass. Remove that limit and how greedy would the ownership class become then? I'm sure we'd end up plumbing the depths of exploitation, leading to generations of hyper-unequal dystopia culminating in a global French Revolution 2.0

          • by twocows ( 1216842 ) on Tuesday June 07, 2022 @04:34PM (#62601184)
            I agree. I think those are legitimate concerns and we should be going in both eyes open. I also think that, long term, this is an inevitability; we're eventually going to figure this problem out, it's going to happen at some point. So I think the most productive way to move forward is to start having a discussion about it, what might need to be done at a policy level to address these kinds of problems ahead of time, and start working toward those goals before it happens.
        • by Holi ( 250190 )
          Like how cellphone prices have come down? Oh wait The top end price for phones doesn't come down they keep going up.
          • by twocows ( 1216842 ) on Tuesday June 07, 2022 @04:52PM (#62601246)
            If you're only looking at the top end, then yes, the prices have gone up because (a) high end has become higher end over time and (b) phones are often bundled with contracts, combatting sticker shock in purchasers.

            I should also note that I paid $150 no contract for my Moto G Pure back in January and it does everything I need it to and then some. So it's not like you have to get an expensive phone.
        • Sounds like this already happens pretty frequently nowadays, at differing layers of abstraction; be it having been born in a developing country, inheriting a poor dietary education, or simply having freer access to more (advanced) medical care as is already the case in places such as the US. Oh, and cryogenic freezing, if that still counts.

          But yet, I would still be in agreement with what I'd imagine to be a majority of people that the only way to ethically permit access to such hypothetical anti-aging medic

      • Sounds like is already happening pretty frequently nowadays, at differing layers of abstraction; be it having been born in a developing country, inheriting a poor dietary education, or simply having freer access to more (advanced) medical care as is already the case in places such as the US. Oh, and cryogenic freezing, if that still counts.

        But yet, I would still be in agreement with what I'd imagine to be a majority that the only way to ethically permit access to such hypothetical anti-aging medicine is to

        • Oh, and cryogenic freezing, if that still counts.

          Haha no it doesn't, the field is 100% pseudoscience right now, about as realistic as a warp drive. I remember a few years ago some actual scientists tried to freeze and thaw a pig carcass using the best scientific knowledge available, just to test the practicality of that part of the process. When they tried to thaw the pig, it cracked in half.

          • Maybe not a pig yet, but I do recall some small success with small animals... was it a rabbit? I don't remember. In any case, the intention is not for immediate success, but rather for potential future success. And modern methods involve fluids that minimize crystallization, so as to not damage tissue. I mean, if it costs as much as a Netflix subscription if you start saving up young, and it allows you the minuscule possibility of seeing the far future, why not.

            But I suppose it does share quite a few simila

      • It's not bad because billionaires are doing it, it's bad because it can lead to the rich living longer than everyone else since anti-aging treatments will be costly elective procedures.

        No, this is perfectly normal, and has been for millennia. Partly it's because the rich can afford to be early adopters, first to try out innovations that with time and competition, slide down the learning curve until they become commonplace for all. One example if this in my own lifetime has been air travel.

        But the more important reason is that certain people are experimentally minded, and enjoy jumping on unproven innovations first. Some of them make horrible mistakes, and die doing it, but in the long run

        • > Typically they are the folk who think that economic differences exist because the rich stole from them.

          Often enough they're right.
          • Often enough they're right.

            But less than you would think, because generally those are the people who have nothing worth stealing.

            • The theft is much more insidious than an honest robber. It happens via manipulation of rent costs, inflation, and taxation. Trillions of dollars going to companies that lobbied for it. Quantitative Easing. Monopolization. Zoning laws. Things that a burger flipper could only understand if he had a couple years of economics classes. That is the hand that slips into his pocket.

              An honest mugging would at least leave him knowing why he now has to buy a fifteen year old car that he'll have to pay more to maintai
      • The global rich already live way longer than the poor. Life expectancy in Japan is 85, in the Central African Republic it's 53. Does that make the Japanese bad people? Do you wish they died younger so life could be fairer?

        • The life expectancy discrepancy isn't good, but it's barely approaching the scale of what life extension technology might be able to deliver. It's also an average and someone with no money at least has a chance of beating the odds.

      • One of the more interesting compounds I've noted in this field is ISRIB [ucsf.edu]. It is being developed by Calico Labs, Alphabet's equivalent of this Saudi Arabian venture with Abbvie as a partner. I believe both Alphabet and Abbvie have contributed funds and resources in the billions range.

        From what I've read about ISRIB, if it were to work out, it would just be a compound that everyone in the world takes once every few years to turn cells back on that were mistakenly turned off. At that kind of volume, I seriously

      • by khchung ( 462899 )

        It's not bad because billionaires are doing it, it's bad because it can lead to the rich living longer than everyone else since anti-aging treatments will be costly elective procedures. This would only exacerbate inequality further.

        The rich have better access to *everything* that money can buy, unless you do away with free market and move 100% to communism, nothing is going to change that. Any technological progress will benefit the rich first, be it better cars, better computers/phones, better materials, better medicine, etc.

        On the long term, only technology progress give significant improvement to everybody's standard of living. That the rich may be getting the benefit first is not a valid reason to slow down research.

        • This isn't an ordinary technological improvement that doesn't even make a big difference to anyone's standard of living, this has the potential to hyper-incentivize greed in an unprecedented way while turning the rich into almost a different species that see the plebs as short-lived insects.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          ...unless you do away with free market and move 100% to communism...

          And that change will last only until someone "more equal" takes over and we wind up with a dictatorship covered with a veneer of Communism.

      • by RobinH ( 124750 )
        I guess that's the difference between you and me. You want billionaires to die, and I hope many more people will eventually get the chance to live a longer healthier life.
        • I hope billionaires will be taxed until they only have relatively sane amounts of money left AND that many more people will eventually get the chance to live a longer healthier life. If more governments and less billionaires were funding this research, that would be far more likely to happen.

          • by RobinH ( 124750 )

            Oh my goodness. First, I agree that the US has too many loopholes for avoiding taxes. However, what you're describing is a regressive tax (tax based on how much you have, not how much you make.) Most of these billionaires don't have billions of dollars sitting in the bank. They own shares of companies. But the IRS doesn't take payment in shares, they take payment in USD. So in order to pay a billion dollars in tax, you have to sell a billion dollars of shares. OK. So in that case you're forcing some

            • However, what you're describing is a regressive tax (tax based on how much you have, not how much you make.)

              The word for that is a property tax or wealth tax, a regressive tax is a different thing, one with lower tax rates for higher taxable amounts:

              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

              There is not even anything practically-regressive about wealth or property taxes in general, unlike sales taxes on essential items such as food for example.

              Most of these billionaires don't have billions of dollars sitting in the bank. They own shares of companies. But the IRS doesn't take payment in shares, they take payment in USD. So in order to pay a billion dollars in tax, you have to sell a billion dollars of shares. OK. So in that case you're forcing someone to sell an asset in order to pay that tax. As soon as they try to do that, the price of the shares goes down (like Musk did last year). So not only did they hand over a billion USD in taxes, but everyone who owns shares of that company now has less wealth (on paper) including the individual you're taxing. That includes a lot of pension funds and the like. Ok, so who purchased that billion dollars of shares? Where did that billion dollars come from? Not a whole lot of investors are sitting around with a billion dollars in cash just to scoop up the shares of people who need to pay their taxes. What you did was take a billion dollars out of the equity market and handed that to the government, so you just implemented quantitative tightening, which is going to reduce investment in growing companies, which means fewer companies that would have expanded and hired more people.

              This all sounds good so far really, the stock market has been running too hot since at least the dot-com era, taking money out of the stock market sounds like a good way to cool it

              • by RobinH ( 124750 )
                You were given the compensation in the form of a stock option, so it's income you received in that year. This would be different than let's say you were given a painting 10 years ago in exchange for doing some contracting work, and the value of that painting went up this year. You owe tax in the year you received it, so at least you can plan for that, or opt not to take the painting (or stock) as compensation. In the case of billionaires, they started a company, they own some of it, and the value of that
    • Sounds like you need to get in the "cure aging" business, job security and there are a lot of rich people that will cough up a lot of money.

    • by Pascoea ( 968200 )
      How do you equate the comment "they have more money than they know what to do with" with it being "bad" that they are spending it on research?
    • Imagine if all the wealth and political influence one can gather in a lifetime was allowed to continue accumulating for more than a single lifetime, and never had to be surrendered to death.

      I can't imagine how short-sighted your thinking must be that you can't see a downside to having the rich and powerful continue to gather wealth and power far beyond the lifespan of the people they oppress. That is literally the plot of more than a few dystopian stories.
      =Smidge=

    • There was no value judgment in the sentence at all, but rather just an amusing observation. No where in that sentence is there any mention of that being "good" or "bad". There's not even an implication about a value judgment, and the rest of the summary is a quote so not even context to imply a value judgment. Yet, there's a rant about a statement that wasn't made and it's getting +5 insightful.

      I therefore have to conclude that the value judgment came from the parent poster, not the summary writer.

      My tak

  • by clawsoon ( 748629 ) on Tuesday June 07, 2022 @03:38PM (#62600996)
    It would be ironic if the upshot of all the research is that the best way to extend healthy lifespans would be to build walkable neighbourhoods where people don't need cars.
    • It would be ironic if the upshot of all the research is that the best way to extend healthy lifespans would be to build walkable neighbourhoods where people don't need cars.

      Yup, that would be a lot of fun in Saudi Arabia, in the summer, in a sand storm -- up hill, both ways ... :-)

  • I'll assume the miracle cure is homosexuality.

  • by expresspotato ( 5687556 ) on Tuesday June 07, 2022 @03:46PM (#62601026)
    1) Eat less overall. Go look at any mouse study and even youtube "How to slow aging and even reverse it" with two mice that are twins! 2) Eat less protein. Your body indirectly to help determine its age. 3) Avoid sources of radiated energy (aka radiation) in all forms, from UV, RF, Gamma, Beta and X-Rays 4) Don't drink or smoke 5) Exercise daily
    • by mugnyte ( 203225 )
      This alone gets you to age 40. You're going to need to also: Remove chronic stress, sleep when tired, live where endocrine disruptors are not omnipresent in the environment, don't inhale air with the output of burnt carbon & microplastics. Add in the need to scan your genome for endemic issues, and periodically track your auto-immune responses via allergy tests, enhance your gut biome to match the particular enzymatic capabilities your digestive system holds. And of course - enjoy yourself throughout
    • Skin cancer aside, getting some sun is pretty good for you.
    • 5) Yamanaka Factors. How much to take to cause stem cells to form and not to cause your body to be overwhelmed with cancer? Well, that's for billionaires and their slave/prisoner test trials in questionable ethics countries to figure out.

  • The worst thing that could happen to humanity and democracy is see the oligarchs live longer. 80 years is enough time to attempt to corrupt and undermine governments to amass more and more power, the inevitability of death is the only hope for the masses. Just do like everyone else and fade from our memories, stop trying to cheat death like you cheat every other law.
    • The worst thing that could happen to humanity and democracy is see the oligarchs live longer.

      Or politicians or judges w/lifetime appointments.

  • They just cut you up into pieces and smuggle you out of their embassy in a suitcase. Once you stop screaming...no more aging.

  • Obviously, this type of research needs exceptional scientists working on it or it has no chance of ever succeeding. These people are basically never motivated by money. Hence this one will fail as well.

  • Try to avoid playing GTW. Nobody lives long in that game.

  • by guardiangod ( 880192 ) on Tuesday June 07, 2022 @04:23PM (#62601148)

    >The Saudi royal family has started a not-for-profit organization called the Hevolution Foundation that plans to spend up to $1 billion a year of its oil wealth supporting basic research on the biology of aging and finding ways to extend the number of years people live in good health

    I guess they are not eager to meet their maker. They reckon they are more likely to go 'down' than 'up', I'd imagine.

  • How many Yemen will this research cost.
    • Google has surprisingly little information about Yemen's GDP but I found the 2018 figure [tradingeconomics.com] of 23.49 billion dollars and the growth rate [tradingeconomics.com] since then. To be lazy I'll merge the growth since then instead of calculating it by year. +.8+2.1-.5=2.4 Also ignoring PPP: 23.49*1.024=24.053.

      1/2.053=.041, and that's how many Yemens this is worth year by year, assuming Yemen's economy keeps up with inflation.
  • Does anyone else find this disturbingly misogynistic?
  • Selective breeding I would guess.

  • I think the fact we lose about 12,000 children a day in the World to starvation - might be a bigger, medical problem than extending the healthy years of the World rich.
  • If anyone really, actually feels like they should die they generally commit suicide. Suicide is a terrible thing, and we need to improve peoples lives to the point that it doesn't happen, but I digress. Now more than ever, but even before our modern age of everything being automatic, extra years of life are almost always good. EVEN EXTRA YEARS OF OLD AGE. Very few old people actually think their state of agedness makes life not worth living. The evidence of this is the fact that they're still around. So the
  • Imagine your favorite dictator living forever.

  • From the article: "There is not a bigger medical problem on the planet than this one."

    I suggest a bigger problem is the psychological one that many people cannot face the inevitability of their own death. The article implies that having loads of money worsens this affliction. I think we should take their money away, for their own good.

    However, there is a lot to be said for research into treating the diseases associated with ageing, which does not necessarily mean prolonging life. For example, a great number

  • Harvard already figured out age reversal in mice, pretty sure that's the holy grail of longevity research right there. Here's one of many links on it: https://www.medicalnewstoday.c... [medicalnewstoday.com]
    • by Junta ( 36770 )

      Good news: They manage to give mice twice the lifespan of a normal mouse
      Bad news:They [they] manage to give humans twice the lifespan of a normal mouse

  • $1 billion dollars later... âoeStop burning fossil fuels. It turns out that cancer from air pollution is shortening lives.â.

    Saudi Arabia: ðY

  • The main discovery will be that the primary driver of aging is the toxic exhaust from burning petroleum products.

The rule on staying alive as a program manager is to give 'em a number or give 'em a date, but never give 'em both at once.

Working...