Amplifying Geroscience Initiative

Educating policymakers about the broad and potentially transformative benefits of geroscience on older citizens’ health and our nation’s economy.

Building on more than four decades of relationships with research institutions, federal programs, and private funders, the American Federation for Aging Research (AFAR) is uniquely poised to be a liaison and leader in increasing attention to geroscience: a groundbreaking biomedical research approach which proposes that by treating the biological processes of aging—not just age-related diseases—we can stay healthier longer.

The biological processes of aging are the greatest risk factors for many chronic diseases and disabilities that affect us all as we grow older. Yet, support from the public and private sectors for research into age-related diseases (such as Cancer, Alzheimer’s, and Diabetes) has not fully intersected with support for research into the biology of aging.

AFAR has launched the Amplifying Geroscience Initiative in order to educate policymakers about the broad and potentially transformative benefits of geroscience on older citizens’ health and our nation’s economy.

Below, please find updates on our progress.

April 2026 Update

President’s FY2027 Budget request includes $25 million for NIA to support Biomarkers

AFAR is pleased to share that the President’s Fiscal Year 2027 budget request includes $25 million for the National Institute on Aging (NIA) to support research on the biomarkers of aging. Biomarkers are measurable biological signals, often from blood, that can indicate how the body is aging and whether an intervention is having an effect. Unlike many disease areas, aging research has lacked widely accepted, validated biomarker endpoints, which forces studies to rely on slow clinical outcomes that can take years to observe.

The HHS Budget in Brief report outlines:
"Understanding the Biomarkers for Aging and Disease: Geroscience is a growing field focused on the discovery and translation of methods and interventions to prevent, minimize, or reverse age-related changes in the body that diminish health and quality of life for older people. The FY 2027 budget includes $25 million for the National Institute on Aging to advance the understanding of the causal biomarkers of aging and disease and elevate interventions that interrupt the drivers of aging through diet, physical activities, and pharmacology."

This milestone builds on AFAR’s continued educational efforts through Amplifying Geroscience, working to ensure that geroscience remains a federal priority, supporting researchers and advancing progress toward healthy aging for all. AFAR is also grateful for the collective efforts of peer organizations that have been advocating for the increased support for geroscience that this budget request represents.

October 2025 Update

Co-Signing Letter to Congress

On October 28, 2025, AFAR recently joined a record 454 organizations in signing the Ad Hoc Group for Medical Research’s letter to Congress. The letter urged for robust funding for the NIH and Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA–H) in the Fiscal Year 2026 budget, and support for sustained federal investment in biomedical research.

September 2025 Update

AFAR Advocacy and Continued Congressional Support for Aging Research

AFAR is pleased to share that the Fiscal Year 2026 House Labor-HHS Appropriations Bill demonstrates Congress’s continued recognition of geroscience’s promise and the importance of investing in the basic biology of aging. The appropriations report includes language supported through AFAR’s federal advocacy efforts that encourages the National Institute on Aging (NIA) to prioritize funding for the Division of Aging Biology and expand geroscience research.

The report also emphasizes the need to support the next generation of aging researchers, encouraging NIA to increase opportunities for postdoctoral researchers and junior faculty in the field. This recognition aligns with AFAR’s ongoing commitment to strengthening the talent pipeline in aging research while advancing translational efforts to close the healthspan-lifespan gap.

Through Amplifying Geroscience, AFAR continues working to ensure that geroscience remains a federal priority, supporting researchers and advancing progress toward healthy aging for all.

August 2024 Update

Female Reproductive Aging and Measuring Biological Age language for FY25 Bill funding NIH

AFAR is pleased to share that two pieces of “report language” have been included in the Senate’s version of the federal fiscal year 2025 appropriations bill that funds the National Institutes of Health (NIH). This is the result of meetings in Spring 2024 arranged by AFAR with staff from key members of Congress to seek their support in urging the NIH to prioritize research in geroscience.

The two items of language are as follows:

  • "Female Reproductive Aging: The Senate Appropriations Committee acknowledges the NIA for its pioneering efforts in geroscience and underscores the importance of investigating female reproductive aging, a critical yet understudied aspect of women’s health and longevity. For example, aging of the female ovary occurs at a more accelerated pace compared to other tissues and organs, posing significant implications for fertility, reproductive health, and overall well-being. This distinct aging process highlights the need for a deeper understanding of the cellular, molecular, genetic and epigenetic factors driving early onset of female reproductive aging. To ensure progress in this pivotal research area, the Committee encourages NIA to convene a workshop with experts from NIH, other relevant Federal agencies, academic institutions, and the private sector to explore the mechanisms that influence female reproductive aging, its impact on women’s health including and beyond reproductive capacity, and the development of strategies and interventions to mitigate its effects. The Committee requests an update in the fiscal year 2026 CJ."
  • "Measuring Biological Age: The Senate Appropriations Committee understands that aging is a primary risk factor for a wide range of chronic diseases and conditions, including cancer, Alzheimer’s disease, frailty, cardiovascular disease, and many others. The Committee also recognizes that modifying fundamental molecular pathways of aging could enhance a person’s healthspan by delaying or mitigating these diseases and conditions. The ability to measure biological age, as distinct from chronological age, is critical to this effort. Therefore, the Committee encourages NIH to explore opportunities to advance research aiming to develop and validate precise measurements of biological age that are reliable across individuals of different races and socio-economic status. The Committee encourages NIH to take a collaborative, transdisciplinary and trans-NIH approach, integrating epidemiology, genomics, multi-omics, organismal physiology, biology and computational biology, and precision therapeutics. The Committee requests an update on this request within 180 days of enactment."

This bill is still awaiting final action by Congress, but it is considered “must-pass” legislation and AFAR’s requests are well positioned for inclusion.

May 2024 update

2024 Fiscal Year Accomplishments

New Funding Opportunity at DoD for FY2024

Thanks to advocacy efforts by AFAR's Amplifying Geroscience initiative, the Department of Defense’s Peer-Reviewed Medical Research Program (PRMRP) will include geroscience in the list of research areas that are eligible for program funding for the first time. In fiscal year 2024, Congress provided $370 million for the PRMRP. Historically, eligible research topics for the PRMRP have ranged from congenital heart disease to suicide prevention, but they had never included anything related to longevity. AFAR made the case that research in this area could provide a wide range of benefits for the Department of Defense, including 1) improving combat casualty care, (2) increasing the time of service, and (3) addressing the long-term consequences of military service. Those efforts paid off in the fiscal year 2024 appropriations bill for defense when Congress added “accelerated aging processes associated with military service” to the PRMRP.


NIH Support for Early Career Investigators

AFAR succeeded in securing congressional “report language” in the fiscal year 2024 appropriations bill for NIH that encourages the National Institute on Aging to prioritize support for early career investigators in geroscience. The language is as follows:

Geroscience—Recent advances in geroscience suggest it may be possible to prevent or treat a wide range of adult-onset health concerns, including functional declines such as frailty and lost resilience, and overt diseases such as Alzheimer’s Disease, cancer, cardiovascular diseases, and many others. This could be achieved by slowing or reversing certain genetic, molecular, and cellular hallmarks of aging discovered through research on the basic biology of aging. The Committee strongly urges the NIA to prioritize funding for geroscience research. The Committee also understands that the enormous promise of this field is limited by a shortage of investigators with expertise in the biology of aging and the clinical translation of basic research findings. Therefore, NIA should increase support for early career investigators, especially postdoctoral researchers and junior faculty, to help attract, retain, and develop top talent in the field of geroscience. Finally, the Committee encourages the NIA to increase funding for basic and translational research in aging to provide more options and test more treatments as quickly as possible.


Research on Biomarkers and Epigenetic Reprogramming at
ARPA-H

AFAR also succeeded in securing report language in the fiscal year 2024 appropriations bill for the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H), a recently created federal agency modeled on DARPA (the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency).

Geroscience—Geroscience research is a revolutionary way to approach health and aligns well with the mission of ARPA–H to identify and invest in high-risk, high-reward research projects that have the potential to transform healthcare and improve public health. By uncovering new insights into the underlying causes of age-related diseases, geroscience research could lead to treatments and therapies that offer the possibility of improving people’s ‘‘healthspan,’’ so they remain healthier longer, and address the growing burden of age-related diseases on society. The Committee urges ARPA–H to prioritize two areas of geroscience research that could advance the field dramatically: biomarkers and epigenetic reprogramming. Discovering and validating biomarkers for aging would significantly improve the efficacy of interventions, while epigenetic reprogramming of cellular age could slow down or even reverse the aging process and thereby prevent or delay the entire panoply of age-related diseases.

March 2024 update

Congress Directing NIH to tabulate Annual Spend on Geroscience Research


Thanks to advocacy efforts by AFAR's Amplifying Geroscience initiative, Congress is now directing NIH to tabulate how much money it spends each year on geroscience research. This has been one of AFAR’s top federal policy priorities.

Although several Institutes and Centers at NIH support research on geroscience, the agency does not currently track the amount of funding it provides—limiting NIH’s ability to address research gaps and monitor progress over time. But in the recently enacted fiscal year 2024 appropriations bill for NIH, Congress “directs NIH to establish a Research, Condition and Disease Categorization category for research related to geroscience.”

AFAR looks forward to providing additional information about NIH funding levels for geroscience when they become available.

Fall 2023 Update

NIH Report to Congress

In response to advocacy efforts by AFAR, Congress urged the NIH in 2022 to issue a report that describes “current NIH research focused on geroscience and future plans in this area.” We are pleased to announce that NIH submitted the report to Congress in the fall of 2023. The 16-page report provides an overview of NIH-wide efforts, examples of NIH-funded research, and a summary of future opportunities.

Download the NIH Report here
Spring 2023 Update

U.S. Senate to include Geroscience in Report Language guiding Federal Agencies through 2024

AFAR is pleased to announce that through the efforts and requests of its Amplifying Geroscience Initiative, the U.S. Senate recently urged the National Institute on Aging (NIA), the Advanced Projects Research Agency for Health (ARPA-H) and the Defense Department (DoD) to prioritize geroscience. The Senate issued this guidance to the agencies through “report language” accompanying the fiscal year 2024 appropriations bills.

Highlights of the language include recommending that the NIA increase its support for early-stage investigators in geroscience and that ARPA-H prioritize research on biomarkers related to aging and epigenetic reprogramming. The Senate also instructed DoD to add “accelerated aging processes related to military service” to its Peer-Reviewed Medical Research Program (PRMRP). If this provision is enacted into law later this year, researchers will be able to apply for geroscience grants from the PRMRP for the first time.

These victories resulted from virtual meetings that AFAR arranged in the spring of 2023 between AFAR-affiliated researchers and dozens of congressional staff from both parties.

December 2022 Update

Geroscience included in Report Language guiding Federal Agencies


AFAR, through the Amplifying Geroscience Initiative, urged Congress throughout 2022 to direct the NIH and FDA to prioritize geroscience. We are delighted to announce that our efforts were successful.

On December 23, 2022, Congress passed a $1.7 trillion fiscal year 2023 spending package that funds the federal government through September 2023. As part of the funding bill, Congress included report language that provides guidance to the federal agencies. At AFAR’s request, Congress included the following language for the NIH and FDA. This is an excellent capstone to AFAR’s first year educating members of Congress on the promise and power of geroscience. The Amplifying Geroscience Initiative now looks forward to 2023 and the FY 2024 appropriations process.

Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education Appropriations Bill

Office of the NIH Director:

“Geroscience—The Committee applauds NIH for recognizing the importance of geroscience to a wide range of chronic conditions and diseases by creating the Cellular Senescence Network (SenNet), an effort to identify and characterize the differences in senescent cells across the body, within the Common Fund. While NIA serves as the lead Institute for geroscience, programs such as SenNet demonstrate how all Institutes and Centers benefit from a greater understanding of this field, given the wide range of chronic conditions and diseases that are influenced by the biology of aging. To date, however, NIH has not analyzed which topics in geroscience are currently being addressed across the Institutes and Centers or how much funding the Institutes and Centers are using to support this research. The lack of this information limits NIH’s ability to address research gaps in a strategic way. Therefore, the Committee encourages NIH to submit a report within 180 days of enactment of this Act that describes current NIH research focused on geroscience and future plans in this area. The Committee would also welcome exploration of a trans-NIH initiative. Such an initiative might include increased funding for basic, translational, and clinical research, research infrastructure, workforce development, the development of platform technologies for geroscience, and collaboration with the FDA, industry, and academia on the discovery and validation of biomarkers.”

NIA Language:

Geroscience.—The Committee commends NIA for its support of geroscience, which seeks to understand the genetic, molecular, and cellular mechanisms that make aging a major risk factor and driver of numerous chronic conditions and diseases, including Alzheimer’s disease, cancer, cardiovascular diseases, and many others. A growing body of research suggests it is possible to develop treatments that would address many late-life diseases, as opposed to solely tackling each disease individually, as under the current prevailing model. Significant advances in recent years highlight the need to develop a comprehensive strategy for addressing research gaps and opportunities. Therefore, the Committee urges NIA to convene a meeting of experts across NIH, other relevant Federal agencies, academic researchers, and the private sector to identify gaps and opportunities for this research field. The Committee also recognizes that there is a shortage of investigators who combine clinical, social, and behavioral research skills with a knowledge of aging biology and experience in the care of older adults and the processes of aging at the individual and societal level. The Committee encourages NIA to expand its translational geroscience training programs to support the pipeline of such investigators. The Committee requests an update on these topics in the fiscal year 2024 Congressional Justification.”

Agriculture, Rural Development, and Food and Drug Administration Appropriations Bill

FDA Language

“The agreement urges the FDA to develop clearer regulatory pathways for emerging aging treatments and to provide an update on its progress in the fiscal year 2024 congressional budget justification. The agreement also urges the FDA to increase support for regulatory science that can inform these pathways, including collaborations with the National Institutes of Health, industry, and academia on the discovery and validation of biomarkers.”

US Capital

WATCH

AFAR Experts speak before Congressional Charter

In September 2022, AFAR Board members Laura Niedernhofer, MD, PhD, and S. Jay Olshansky, PhD, spoke before the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Science, Space, and Technology through the Subcommittee on Investigations and Oversight at a special Hearing Charter, "The Fountain of Youth? The Quest for Aging Therapies."

WATCH HERE

Amplifying Geroscience Steps - 2021-22

  • In 2021, AFAR received funding to begin advocacy work to amplify the interest and discussion of geroscience research. With the assistance of Cornerstone Government Affairs, AFAR has begun engaging with congressional members to help assure government interest in the promise of aging research
  • AFAR, with support from Cornerstone, has drafted language that includes informal recommendations for opportunities across the National Institutes of Health (NIH), National Institute on Aging (NIA), and Federal Drug Administration (FDA) to strengthen the foundation of knowledge and support they’ve provided geroscience to date. This report has been presented to congressional staff with the goal of being included in the FY 2023 budget
  • AFAR has cultivated a relationship with Sen. Casey D-PA, who is the chair of the senate aging committee and a main advocate
  • AFAR organized a meeting between geroscientists and directors and officers of the National Institute on Aging (NIA) to review their current geroscience programming and contemplate future collaborations.
  • AFAR leadership and AFAR-supported scientists have met with both the House of Representatives and the Senate. In March and April 2022, AFAR met with key subcommittee members to request geroscience specific language be a part of the NIH and FDA budget appropriations for FY 2023. This non-partisan effort pulled together 20 meetings with key members who are now requesting geroscience be included in the final budget
  • AFAR and Cornerstone pitched a question on geroscience to the staffer for Rep. Roybal-Allard, that was asked during the House Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education Appropriations Subcommittee hearing on “Healthy Aging: Maximizing the Independence, Well-being, and Health of Older Adults.” Watch at 2:09:30 in this recording.
  • AFAR met with the Deputy Director for Health and Life Sciences at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy to encourage increased focus on the needs in advancing geroscience.
  • In September 2022, AFAR Board members Laura Niedernhofer, MD, PhD, and S. Jay Olshansky, PhD, spoke before the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Science, Space, and Technology through the Subcommittee on Investigations and Oversight at a special Hearing Charter, "The Fountain of Youth? The Quest for Aging Therapies." Watch a recording of the hearing here. Read a related background document here.

For more information on the Amplifying Geroscience Initiative, please email AFAR.