A geroscience perspective on immune resilience and infectious diseases: a potential case for metformin.
Jamie Nicole JusticeSriram GubbiAmeya S KulkarniJenna M BartleyGeorge A KuchelNir BarzilaiPublished in: GeroScience (2020)
We are in the midst of the global pandemic. Though acute respiratory coronavirus (SARS-COV2) that leads to COVID-19 infects people of all ages, severe symptoms and mortality occur disproportionately in older adults. Geroscience interventions that target biological aging could decrease risk across multiple age-related diseases and improve outcomes in response to infectious disease. This offers hope for a new host-directed therapeutic approach that could (i) improve outcomes following exposure or shorten treatment regimens; (ii) reduce the chronic pathology associated with the infectious disease and subsequent comorbidity, frailty, and disability; and (iii) promote development of immunological memory that protects against relapse or improves response to vaccination. We review the possibility of this approach by examining available evidence in metformin: a generic drug with a proven safety record that will be used in a large-scale multicenter clinical trial. Though rigorous translational research and clinical trials are needed to test this empirically, metformin may improve host immune defenses and confer protection against long-term health consequences of infectious disease, age-related chronic diseases, and geriatric syndromes.
Keyphrases
- infectious diseases
- sars cov
- clinical trial
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- coronavirus disease
- physical activity
- drug induced
- healthcare
- multiple sclerosis
- double blind
- public health
- open label
- phase ii
- study protocol
- cardiovascular events
- climate change
- risk factors
- human health
- cross sectional
- metabolic syndrome
- skeletal muscle
- health information
- respiratory failure
- depressive symptoms
- hepatitis b virus
- coronary artery disease
- glycemic control
- hip fracture
- smoking cessation