The Mel Robbins PodcastThe Mel Robbins Podcast

Advice From the #1 Longevity Doctor: Add 10 Years to Your Life With 3 Simple Habits

Mel Robbins and Dr. Eric Topol on top Longevity Doctor Destroys Anti-Aging Myths, Prescribes Proven Lifestyle Fixes.

Mel RobbinshostDr. Eric Topolguest
May 1, 20251h 5mWatch on YouTube ↗
Healthspan vs. lifespan and prevention of the ‘big three’ age-related diseasesEvidence-based longevity: Lifestyle+ (diet, exercise, sleep, social and environmental factors)Critique of the commercial anti-aging industry and unproven interventionsNew aging science: biological age, organ clocks, polygenic risk scores, and multimodal AICancer risk, early detection strategies, and misuse of high-tech screening (MCED, full-body MRI)Nutrition, ultra-processed foods, protein needs, and the limited role of supplementsExercise as the single most powerful anti-aging and mental health intervention
AI-generated summary based on the episode transcript.

In this episode of The Mel Robbins Podcast, featuring Mel Robbins and Dr. Eric Topol, Advice From the #1 Longevity Doctor: Add 10 Years to Your Life With 3 Simple Habits explores top Longevity Doctor Destroys Anti-Aging Myths, Prescribes Proven Lifestyle Fixes Mel Robbins interviews world-renowned cardiologist and researcher Dr. Eric Topol about the real science of aging versus the booming, largely unproven anti‑aging industry. Topol explains that the real goal is extending healthspan—years of healthy, functional life—by preventing the ‘big three’ age-related diseases: cancer, cardiovascular disease, and neurodegenerative disorders like Alzheimer’s. Drawing from his book *SuperAgers*, he outlines evidence-based lifestyle ‘plus’ factors—diet, exercise, sleep, social connection, environment, and mental health—that can add 7–10 years of healthy life, even if started later in life. He also warns against expensive, risky anti-aging clinics, fad interventions, and overhyped tests, emphasizing that no pill, transfusion, or supplement has been proven to slow or reverse aging in humans.

At a glance

WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT

Top Longevity Doctor Destroys Anti-Aging Myths, Prescribes Proven Lifestyle Fixes

  1. Mel Robbins interviews world-renowned cardiologist and researcher Dr. Eric Topol about the real science of aging versus the booming, largely unproven anti‑aging industry. Topol explains that the real goal is extending healthspan—years of healthy, functional life—by preventing the ‘big three’ age-related diseases: cancer, cardiovascular disease, and neurodegenerative disorders like Alzheimer’s. Drawing from his book *SuperAgers*, he outlines evidence-based lifestyle ‘plus’ factors—diet, exercise, sleep, social connection, environment, and mental health—that can add 7–10 years of healthy life, even if started later in life. He also warns against expensive, risky anti-aging clinics, fad interventions, and overhyped tests, emphasizing that no pill, transfusion, or supplement has been proven to slow or reverse aging in humans.

IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING

5 ideas

Prioritize healthspan by targeting the ‘big three’ diseases early.

Cancer, cardiovascular disease, and neurodegenerative conditions incubate for 20+ years; starting preventive lifestyle changes in midlife (or even at 70–80) can delay or avert these diseases and add 7–10 years of healthy life.

Adopt a Lifestyle+ approach, not just diet-and-exercise tweaks.

Beyond eating better, moving more, and sleeping well, Topol stresses reducing ultra-processed food, improving sleep quality (especially deep sleep), maintaining social connections, reducing exposure to pollution and harmful chemicals, spending time in nature, and managing chronic stress.

Use exercise as your primary ‘anti-aging drug.’

Regular aerobic activity (about 30 minutes, five days a week) plus resistance training and balance work is the only intervention proven to lower biological age, reduce inflammation, improve mental health, and outperform antidepressants in many cases.

Cut ultra-processed foods and added sugars to reduce inflammation and disease risk.

Ultra-processed foods disrupt gut–brain signaling, promote overeating, drive systemic inflammation, and are strongly linked to obesity, type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, cancer, and accelerated aging; even reducing their share of your diet from 60–70% is meaningful.

Be skeptical of anti-aging clinics, infusions, and supplements.

Interventions like rapamycin, NAD+ supplements, senolytics, young plasma infusions, IV ‘anti-aging drips,’ and most vitamins/supplements lack robust human evidence for slowing aging and can carry real risks (e.g., immune suppression, cancer, procedure complications).

WORDS WORTH SAVING

5 quotes

Ultimately, if you do all the things that we're talking about, study after study shows this extends healthy aging by seven to ten years.

Dr. Eric Topol

People keep talking about longevity. What we want to do is improve our health span—that is, our years of healthy living.

Dr. Eric Topol

There is nothing that's been proven in people to promote the slowing or reversing of aging—whether they're pills, compounds, infusions, transfusions—none of that is proven.

Dr. Eric Topol

Turns out that exercise is the only thing we know that lowers our biological age.

Dr. Eric Topol

If you really do a dedication to lifestyle plus factors, you're gonna get years more of healthy aging. And you can ignore all the false anti-aging supplements and drugs and interventions that exist today.

Dr. Eric Topol

QUESTIONS ANSWERED IN THIS EPISODE

5 questions

If someone is starting from a very unhealthy baseline in midlife, which single Lifestyle+ change—diet, exercise, sleep, or social connection—will likely produce the fastest, most motivating health improvements?

Mel Robbins interviews world-renowned cardiologist and researcher Dr. Eric Topol about the real science of aging versus the booming, largely unproven anti‑aging industry. Topol explains that the real goal is extending healthspan—years of healthy, functional life—by preventing the ‘big three’ age-related diseases: cancer, cardiovascular disease, and neurodegenerative disorders like Alzheimer’s. Drawing from his book *SuperAgers*, he outlines evidence-based lifestyle ‘plus’ factors—diet, exercise, sleep, social connection, environment, and mental health—that can add 7–10 years of healthy life, even if started later in life. He also warns against expensive, risky anti-aging clinics, fad interventions, and overhyped tests, emphasizing that no pill, transfusion, or supplement has been proven to slow or reverse aging in humans.

How soon do biological aging markers (like epigenetic or organ clocks) actually improve once a person consistently changes their lifestyle, and can patients access such testing today in a practical way?

Where is the ethical line between helpful early-risk information (e.g., polygenic risk scores, Alzheimer’s blood tests) and creating anxiety or over-medicalization in people who might never develop those diseases?

What policy or regulatory changes would most effectively curb the ‘longevity circus’ of expensive, unproven anti-aging interventions that are currently being marketed to consumers?

How can healthcare systems realistically integrate multimodal AI and personalized risk scores into everyday primary care so that prevention becomes the default, not an elite or concierge service?

EVERY SPOKEN WORD

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