Skip to content
Open access · US-GOV via ClinicalTrials.gov Clinical trial

FAXAGE: A Randomized, Controlled Clinical Trial Of Fasting And Exercise To Slow Aging In Humans

Authors not listed

University of Copenhagen · 2025

Abstract

FAXAge is a randomized controlled trial investigating the effects of fasting and exercise on human aging. 240 participants over the age of 65 will be divided into 4 groups - an exercise group, a fasting group, a combined exercise and fasting group and a control group. The intervention will last for one year, and tests of biomarkers of aging will be performed at baseline, after 3 months, 6 months and at the end of the intervention. A reference group of participants over the age of 20 equally distributed by age and sex will be used to train an algorithm for determination of biological age. The study will include both physical, molecular and digital biomarkers including DNA-methylation, VO2max, body composition and face- and voice-age. The main outcome of the project is DNA-methylation age at week 52. Secondary outcomes are the rest of the tested biomarkers at week 52. It is hypothesised that the intervention groups will have similar superior benefits after the 52 weeks of intervention.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-05-29 MST

Cite this

APA
Anonymous. (2025). FAXAGE: A Randomized, Controlled Clinical Trial Of Fasting And Exercise To Slow Aging In Humans. <em>University of Copenhagen</em>. https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT07207044
Vancouver
Anonymous. FAXAGE: A Randomized, Controlled Clinical Trial Of Fasting And Exercise To Slow Aging In Humans. University of Copenhagen. 2025.
BibTeX
@misc{anon2025FAXAGE, title = {FAXAGE: A Randomized, Controlled Clinical Trial Of Fasting And Exercise To Slow Aging In Humans}, author = {Anonymous}, journal = {University of Copenhagen}, year = {2025}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings