OtherEmergingPrescription only

Rapamycin (Sirolimus)

Perhaps the most exciting longevity compound in research — an mTOR inhibitor that reliably extends lifespan in animal models. In humans it's prescription-only, and as a longevity use it's off-label and unproven.

Also known as: rapamycin, sirolimus, rapamune

Only under medical supervision

This compound is a prescription drug, or a medication with relevant risks and interactions. We deliberately do not sell it and link no source of supply. Taking it belongs in a doctor's hands — this page is for neutral information only.

Discuss benefits, risks, and dosing with your physician.

How it works

Rapamycin inhibits mTOR, a central switch that drives growth under nutrient surplus and brakes the cell's waste disposal (autophagy). When mTOR is dampened, autophagy rises, which most robustly extends lifespan in animal models. In humans it's off-label and experimental; dosing and safety are decisive.

Goals
Longevity (broad)
Timing
Pulse dosed
Price tier
Premium

Dosage

The longevity scene discusses low, intermittent doses (off-label). Dosing strictly by a physician — rapamycin is approved as an immunosuppressant, not for life extension.

Considerations

The animal data are striking (lifespan extension across species; more in the piece on rapamycin & mTOR). In humans, long-term outcome studies are entirely lacking. It's a prescription immunosuppressant with real risks (infection susceptibility, metabolism, wound healing); intermittent low-dose use aims to mitigate this but is unproven. Conceivable only under specialized medical supervision.

VeganDrug interactionsNot during pregnancy
Form
Capsule

Scientific detail

Mechanisms
Inhibits mTOR (nutrient sensor)Activates autophagyMimics effects of calorie restriction
Hallmarks of aging
Deregulated nutrient sensingDisabled macroautophagy
Evidence base

Studies on Rapamycin (Sirolimus)

51,487 studies total · Open on PubMed

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Articles on Rapamycin (Sirolimus)

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