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RF1AG095175

Project Grant

Overview

Grant Description
Effect of caloric restriction on aging biomarkers, frailty, and multimorbidity in older adults - Project summary/abstract

Obesity is associated with poor quality of life and reduced lifespan and healthspan – the period of time free of multiple chronic diseases and disability.

Given that over one-third of older adults are obese, identifying effective therapies that prevent obesity-related declines in healthspan and lifespan in older adults are urgently needed.

Clinical trials by our group and others show that caloric restriction improves physical and metabolic function over the short-term in older adults with obesity.

However, the long-term benefits of caloric restriction in this population remain controversial and weight loss is often not recommended because of uncertainty of whether the benefits outweigh the risks (e.g., loss of muscle mass and bone).

The field of geroscience aims to address biological aging by targeting the fundamental biology shared by the aging process to prevent or delay common age-related chronic diseases in hopes of extending healthspan and lifespan.

Caloric restriction is one such intervention known to alter aging biology to extend healthspan and lifespan in multiple species, including non-human primates; however, the effects of caloric restriction in extending healthspan and lifespan in humans remains unknown.

The overall goals of the proposed study are to determine if short-term caloric restriction in older adults with obesity affects biomarkers of biological aging and whether these biomarkers of biological aging are correlated with healthspan.

We will determine the effects of randomization to caloric restriction on a consensus derived blood-based biomarker index (IL-6, TNFΑR1, GDF-15, Cystatin C, CRP, and Insulin; primary aim) and multimorbidity and deficit accumulation frailty indices (secondary aim) an average of 10 years after the completion of a caloric restriction intervention.

Our primary hypothesis is that randomization to caloric restriction will result in improved biomarkers of biological aging compared to a control condition in older adults with obesity and this improvement will be reflected in better healthspan.

We will leverage biospecimens and data from 5 NIH-supported randomized controlled trials conducted under the auspices of the Wake Forest Pepper Center that enrolled older adults (mean age at randomization, 67.3 years) with overweight or obesity (BMI≥27 kg/m²) and randomized them to caloric restriction (N=520) or no caloric restriction (N=446) from 2005 to 2014 to conduct an individual participant-level meta-analysis with sufficient sample size to definitively evaluate the effect of caloric restriction on biological aging.

We will also explore the effects of randomization to caloric restriction on cellular senescence and proteomic biomarkers and the underlying molecular mechanisms of caloric restriction, as well as the associations between cellular senescence and proteomic biomarkers on multimorbidity and a deficit accumulation frailty index.

The proposed study builds on the Wake Forest’s Pepper Center’s collaborative research focus in geriatric obesity treatment to answer compelling and clinically important questions regarding the efficacy of caloric restriction to slow biological aging and increase healthspan in older adults with obesity in an efficient and cost-effective manner.
Funding Goals
<P>THE GOALS ARE:</P><UL><LI>TO FOSTER FUNDAMENTAL CREATIVE DISCOVERIES, INNOVATIVE RESEARCH STRATEGIES, AND THEIR APPLICATIONS AS A BASIS FOR ULTIMATELY PROTECTING AND IMPROVING HEALTH;</LI><LI>TO DEVELOP, MAINTAIN, AND RENEW SCIENTIFIC HUMAN AND PHYSICAL RESOURCES THAT WILL ENSURE THE NATION'S CAPABILITY TO PREVENT DISEASE;</LI><LI>TO EXPAND THE KNOWLEDGE BASE IN MEDICAL AND ASSOCIATED SCIENCES IN ORDER TO ENHANCE THE NATION'S ECONOMIC WELL-BEING AND ENSURE A CONTINUED HIGH RETURN ON THE PUBLIC INVESTMENT IN RESEARCH; AND</LI><LI>TO EXEMPLIFY AND PROMOTE THE HIGHEST LEVEL OF SCIENTIFIC INTEGRITY, PUBLIC ACCOUNTABILITY, AND SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY IN THE CONDUCT OF SCIENCE.</LI></UL><P>IN REALIZING THESE GOALS, THE NIH PROVIDES LEADERSHIP AND DIRECTION TO PROGRAMS DESIGNED TO IMPROVE THE HEALTH OF THE NATION BY CONDUCTING AND SUPPORTING RESEARCH:</P><UL><LI>IN THE CAUSES, DIAGNOSIS, PREVENTION, AND CURE OF HUMAN DISEASES;</LI><LI>IN THE PROCESSES OF HUMAN GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT;</LI><LI>IN THE BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINANTS;</LI><LI>IN THE UNDERSTANDING OF MENTAL, ADDICTIVE AND PHYSICAL DISORDERS; AND</LI><LI>IN DIRECTING PROGRAMS FOR THE COLLECTION, DISSEMINATION, AND EXCHANGE OF INFORMATION IN MEDICINE AND HEALTH, INCLUDING THE DEVELOPMENT AND SUPPORT OF MEDICAL LIBRARIES AND THE TRAINING OF MEDICAL LIBRARIANS AND OTHER HEALTH INFORMATION SPECIALISTS.</LI></UL>
Grant Program (CFDA)
Place of Performance
Winston Salem, North Carolina 27157 United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Wake Forest University Health Sciences was awarded Caloric Restriction Effects on Aging Biomarkers in Older Adults with Obesity Project Grant RF1AG095175 worth $3,157,326 from National Institute on Aging in June 2026 with work to be completed primarily in Winston Salem North Carolina United States. The grant has a duration of 4 years and was awarded through assistance program 93.866 Aging Research. The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity NIH Research Project Grant (Parent R01 Clinical Trial Not Allowed).

Status
(Ongoing)

Last Modified 6/5/26

Period of Performance
6/1/26
Start Date
5/31/30
End Date
1.0% Complete

Funding Split
$3.2M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$3.2M
Total Obligated
100.0% Federal Funding
0.0% Non-Federal Funding

Activity Timeline

Interactive chart of timeline of amendments to RF1AG095175

Additional Detail

Award ID FAIN
RF1AG095175
SAI Number
RF1AG095175-3694171028
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Private Institution Of Higher Education
Awarding Office
75NN00 NIH National Insitute on Aging
Funding Office
75NN00 NIH National Insitute on Aging
Awardee UEI
SN7KD2UK7GC5
Awardee CAGE
1WEZ6
Performance District
NC-10
Senators
Thom Tillis
Ted Budd
Modified: 6/5/26