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Daily Multivitamin Slightly Slows Two Biological Age Clocks in Older Adults

Researchers report modest changes in two DNA methylation clocks with the health impact unresolved.

Overview

  • The multivitamin arm showed PCPhenoAge slowing by about 2.6 months per year and PCGrimAge by about 1.4 months, while three other clocks showed no significant change.
  • Across two years, users’ epigenetic age advanced roughly four months less than in the placebo group.
  • Participants with accelerated biological aging at baseline experienced larger effects, with PCGrimAge slowing by about 2.8 months per year.
  • The randomized COSMOS analysis included 958 generally healthy adults around age 70 assigned to Centrum multivitamin, a cocoa extract, both, or placebo for two years, with products supplied by Haleon and Mars in an NIH‑supported trial.
  • Cocoa extract produced no measurable effect on any clock, and authors and independent experts caution that clinical benefits remain unproven and require longer, outcome‑focused studies.