Fasting Mimicking Diet Looks Pretty Good
CW: diets, calories
One of the odd things about working on longevity is that now people ask me for lifestyle advice.
Or they ask me what _I, personally _ do to live longer.
Mostly my response has been a lame “um, nothing?”
There are, as of now,_ no _interventions shown to make humans live longer or slow or reverse the human aging process. And, of the interventions reported to make animals live longer, many are doubtful, and many are too risky or unpleasant to make the cost-benefit tradeoff look good for healthy people.
Also, as a personal matter, I’m just not very interested in my own “lifestyle optimization” for the most part. My motivation is about helping people, not especially staving off death for myself; I think I’m more mentally prepared for death than most people my age. Certainly I’ve thought about it more concretely. (BTW, if you too like to know all the gory and technical details about how people die, this blog by an ICU nurse is gold.)
And “lifestyle optimization” turns out to be heavily about diet and exercise, and…I confess, diet culture really creeps me out. Not at all my thing.
That said, there is a lifestyle intervention that seems pretty evidence-based and also pretty low on risk and inconvenience: the Fasting Mimicking Diet, developed by Valter Longo of USC.
It’s actually been tested in a clinical trial on 100 healthy participants, where it improved a bunch of biomarkers related to aging and disease (reduced IGF and blood pressure, though no change in glucose, triglycerides, cholesterol, or CRP.)
The really good results are in mice, where it rescues both Type I and Type II diabetes as well as a mouse model of MS, reduces tumors by 45% and dermatitis by 50%, increases mesenchymal stem cells by 45x, improves motor and cognitive performance, and results in an 11% lifespan extension.
So, what is the FMD?
It’s a 5-day low-calorie, low-carb, low-protein diet, followed by a period of eating however you would by default.
Caloric restriction (reducing calorie intake about 1/3 from baseline or ad-lib) is probably the most replicated lifespan- and healthspan-extending intervention in animals. It’s about 30-40% life extension in mice and rats. In monkeys, it extends lifespan little if at all, but delays age-related disease and hair loss. However, the side effects are nontrivial — humans on CR experience weakness, lethargy, depression, muscle wasting, and neurological deficits. (Undereating also stunts growth in children and adolescents, and underweight in women causes infertility, miscarriage, and preterm birth.)
Mice seem to get most of the benefits of CR, including an equally extended lifespan, from an isocaloric but low-protein or low-methionine diet. Low-protein diets are safe for humans and might not be as damaging to quality of life, but they do definitely inhibit physical fitness/performance.
Alternate-day fasting in mice has a bunch of benefits, including lifespan extension of 10-30% depending on mouse strain, as well as reduction in cancer incidence, and lower levels of neural damage in mouse models of Alzheimer’s, Huntington’s, Parkinson’s, and acute brain injury. In a randomized controlled trial in humans, alternate-day fasting caused weight loss but no improvement in metabolic/cardiovascular parameters.
The FMD seems like the _least _amount of dietary restriction that is still known to cause life extension. 5 days/month of low calorie intake isn’t that big a commitment.
Valter Longo sells patented packaged foods for the FMD, but they’re pricey ($300 for five days).
What I find more aesthetic, and cheaper, is an adapted version, which I’m trying now:
For the first five weekdays of every month, eat nothing but (non-potato) vegetables, cooked in fat if desired. The rest of the time, eat whatever you want.
It’s low-calorie and low-protein while containing vitamins, but it skips the calorie-counting and allows you to actually cook tasty food.
Since I’m breastfeeding, which is about a 500-calorie daily expenditure, it’s a little harder on me than it would be by default, so I’m adding the modification of if you feel weak or lightheaded, eat a fat source until you stop feeling that way. I expect this is probably a good conservative measure for people in general.
This ought to be generally safe for healthy adults under 65. The clinical trial reported no adverse effects more serious than fatigue.
It’s definitely not a good idea for children, diabetics, pregnant people, or people with disordered eating.
If you basically believe the science that periods of little or no food promote good metabolic processes (autophagy, reduced inflammation, increased neurogenesis & stem cell production) but you don’t want the nasty side effects of prolonged caloric restriction, some kind of intermittent or periodic fasting seems like a sensible thing to try.
I don’t think there’s any direct evidence that the FMD is better than intermittent fasting for health, but it seems easier to do, and maybe a bit better in terms of results from randomized human trials.
If you (like me) really don’t like the aesthetics of dieting — “special” pre-packaged foods, appearance insecurity, calorie counting, having to make excuses to the people around you for eating “weirdly” — a homebrew FMD is pretty ideal because you are spending very little time “on a diet”, and you are eating normal things (vegetables). Also, it’s not necessarily a weight-loss diet, and you can conceptualize it as primarily about health, not looks.
I don’t expect it to have nontrivial lifespan effects on humans, but it might be good for healthspan or disease risk, and that seems worthwhile to me.