Dr Bradley Elliott — physiologist, university lecturer, and a trustee and Communications Lead at the British Society for Research on Ageing — joins host Daphna for a refreshingly honest conversation about what longevity science actually knows and what we still cannot explain.
This episode cuts through the certainty. We talk about biomarkers and biological age, why many measurements may be tracking effects rather than causes, we discuss extracellular vesicles and the surprising limit of science. Dr Bradley discusses some of his papers and related research, and our conversation challenges much of the conventional wisdom in the longevity space.
What we cover:
-Why we still do not know what fundamentally causes ageing — and why every “root cause” often leads to something deeper
-What biomarkers really measure, what they can and cannot tell you, and which markers are most worth tracking right now
-Biological age vs chronological age: where the concept is useful, and where it gets overclaimed
-Why muscle is one of the most underrated “health organs” in ageing — and what it supports beyond strength
-Exercise for longevity: the evidence-based basics, plus what matters most for consistency and adherence
-“It is not too late”: what studies in very old adults suggest about strength gains later in life
-Extracellular vesicles: the hidden communication system between cells, and why it is getting so much attention
-Wearables: why they can still be useful even when the numbers are not perfectly accurate
This is a fascinating episode with someone who knows how to communicate science and make it relatable
Links to Dr Bradley Elliot:
- https://www.westminster.ac.uk/about-us/our-people/directory/elliott-bradley
- https://bsra.org.uk/bradley-elliott-2/
- https://www.bradelliott.online/
Papers & Research Referenced• Perri et al. (2025) — Delphi review identifying 14 biomarkers of ageing for use in human research (co-authored by Dr Elliott)
' https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39708300/
• Lady V Barrios-Silva et al. — Activin subfamily peptides and prediction of age and physical function (undergraduate-led research, University of Westminster)
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30178598/
• Dr Yvoni Kyriakidou (PhD) — Exercise-induced muscle damage in young and old men; extracellular vesicle characterisation post-exercise
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34650440/
• Dr Niharika Duggal (University of Birmingham) — Masters athletes and immune function; older athletes vs. age-matched non-athletes
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29517845/
• Stephen Harridge (King's College London) — Resistance training in 90+ year olds; gains in muscle strength and mass in the oldest old
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10398199/
• Science paper on genetic contribution to longevity — updated estimate shifting genetic contribution to ~50% (noted with editorial by Dr Elliott)
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adz1187
https://theconversation.com/what-new-twins-study-reveals-about-genes-environment-and-longevity-274763
https://www.ukbiobank.ac.uk/
If you enjoyed this episode, we'd love it if you took 60 seconds to leave us a review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify. It genuinely helps more people find the show and means we can keep bringing you honest, science-backed conversations like this one. Thank you
https://beyond-longevity.co.uk/
Chapters:
00:00 Why We Age
01:52 Meet Bradley Elliot
03:07 From Sports Science
05:32 Defining Ageing
07:03 Mechanisms And Theories
09:29 Biomarkers Explained
13:02 Delphi Biomarker List
16:59 Myostatin Study Story
21:25 Actionable Biomarkers
26:07 Wearables And Accuracy
27:38 Endocrine Fingerprints
30:11 Muscle And Healthy Ageing
33:21 Athletes And Immunity
34:26 Muscle Mass And Healthspan
36:36 Exercise Dose Guidelines
39:42 Resistance Training Plateau
40:42 Lifestyle Versus Genetics
42:42 Muscle Damage Study
44:44 Extracellular Vesicles Explained
46:49 Young Blood Controversy
50:08 Dream Research With Omics
56:55 What People Misjudge
58:43 It’s Never Too Late
01:02:41 Rapid Fire And Wrap
01:04:31 Final Takeaways