IGF-1 & Animal Protein: The Hidden Connection That Could Add Years to Your Life
Key Takeaways
- • A 1993 discovery revolutionized aging research: A single gene mutation doubled lifespan in roundworms by affecting the IGF-1 receptor pathway - the same pathway that exists in humans.
- • IGF-1 is your body's "grow" signal: Essential during childhood, but elevated levels in adulthood are linked to faster aging and increased cancer risk.
- • Centenarians have lower IGF-1: And crucially, so do their children - suggesting low IGF-1 causes longevity, not the other way around.
- • Smaller often means longer-lived: From dogs to humans, lower IGF-1 correlates with both smaller size and longer lifespan.
- • The good news: While you can't change your genes, you can influence your IGF-1 levels through diet.
The Worm That Lived Twice As Long
In 1993, researcher Cynthia Kenyon discovered something that shouldn't have been possible.
The roundworms in her laboratory - creatures that normally live two to three weeks - were still alive and active after six weeks. They should have been dead for a month. Instead, they looked like young worms in their prime.
The cause? A single genetic mutation.
"They were active and healthy and they lived more than twice as long as normal. It seemed magical but also a little creepy: they should have been dead, but there they were, moving around."
- Cynthia Kenyon
Side-by-side comparison: Normal worms at 6 weeks vs. mutant worms at 6 weeks
This was the largest lifespan extension ever reported - equivalent to a healthy 200-year-old human. From one genetic change.
The "Grim Reaper Gene"
The mutation affected what researchers came to call the "Grim Reaper gene." When working normally, it accelerates aging. Knock it out, and animals live dramatically longer.
Here's what made this discovery revolutionary: this gene codes for the worm equivalent of the human IGF-1 receptor. And this pathway isn't unique to worms - evolution preserved it across species, from microscopic organisms all the way to humans.
When researchers disrupted IGF-1 signaling in mice, those mice lived 42 to 70 percent longer. Some looked like forty-year-olds when they were actually eighty.
What Is IGF-1?
The 60-Second Explanation
IGF-1 (Insulin-like Growth Factor 1) is a hormone your liver produces that tells cells throughout your body to grow and divide.
During Childhood
Essential. You need cells to multiply to build bones, muscles, and organs.
During Adulthood
Potentially problematic. Once you're fully grown, the "keep dividing" signal becomes a liability.
Think of IGF-1 like a construction crew. Invaluable when building a house. But once it's built, having them constantly add extensions and knock out walls isn't helpful - it's disruptive.
Split illustration: Construction crew building a house (childhood) vs.
Same crew making unwanted modifications to a completed home (adulthood)
Here's what shifts your perspective: your IGF-1 levels have been naturally declining since your twenties. This might sound like your body failing.
But remember those long-lived worms - lower IGF-1 signaling was the key to their extended lifespan.
The natural decline in IGF-1 may not be deterioration.
It may be protection.
What Centenarians Teach Us About IGF-1
When researchers measured IGF-1 in people who'd lived past 100, they found a consistent pattern: centenarians have lower IGF-1 levels.
But this created a puzzle. IGF-1 naturally declines with age. Were these people living long because of low IGF-1? Or did they simply have low IGF-1 because they'd lived so long?
The Clever Solution
Researchers studied the children of centenarians, comparing them to people the same age whose parents weren't centenarians.
The finding was striking: children of centenarians also had lower IGF-1 levels than their peers.
Bar chart comparing IGF-1 levels: Children of centenarians vs. age-matched controls
Demonstrating inherited lower IGF-1 precedes longevity
These weren't elderly people - these were middle-aged adults with IGF-1 lower than expected for their age group. This strongly suggests low IGF-1 isn't just a consequence of living long. It's part of what enables exceptional longevity in the first place.
The Genetic Evidence
Hundreds of human genetic variants have been studied in relation to lifespan. The pathway consistently linked to longevity? IGF-1 signaling.
A single IGF-1-lowering gene variant, when inherited from both parents, adds as much as ten years to life expectancy. People born with genetically lower IGF-1 are more likely to reach their nineties - and from age ninety onward, those with lower IGF-1 are more likely to survive into the next decade.
The Ashkenazi Twist
Studies of Ashkenazi Jewish centenarians found something curious: two longevity-linked mutations that actually raised IGF-1 levels. Contradictory?
Not when you look closer. The mutations weren't in the IGF-1 gene - they were in the IGF-1 receptor. The receptor was less responsive. So even with more IGF-1 floating around, the signal reaching cells was weaker.
Whether through lower IGF-1 levels or less responsive receptors, the outcome was the same: dampened IGF-1 signaling.
The Surprising Size-Longevity Connection
Here's a counterintuitive finding: within many species, smaller individuals live longer.
Toy poodles average nearly twice the lifespan of Great Danes. Small horses outlive large ones. Asian elephants (smaller) outlive African elephants. The pattern repeats across species.
The connection? IGF-1 drives growth. Higher IGF-1 means larger size - and shorter lifespan.
What About Humans?
Now that childhood malnutrition is less common in developed countries, the underlying pattern is emerging in humans too. Controlling for socioeconomic factors, shorter stature predicts longer lifespan.
Consider: men are about 8 percent taller than women on average - and have about 8 percent shorter lifespans.
The Height-Cancer Link
The relationship between height and mortality appears driven largely by cancer.
Each additional inch in height is associated with approximately 6 percent increased risk of dying from cancer.
Men have more than 50 percent higher cancer risk than women. Why? Two likely factors:
More cells = more opportunities for cancer. Larger bodies have more cells, meaning more chances for something to go wrong during cell division.
Higher IGF-1 promotes proliferation. The same growth signals that create larger bodies continue operating throughout life, potentially fueling unwanted cell division.
The Important Caveat
You can't change your height, and being tall isn't a disease. Many tall people live long, healthy lives.
The point isn't to worry about height. It's what this relationship reveals about IGF-1 biology.
What matters isn't your height. It's your ongoing IGF-1 levels - which, unlike height, you can influence.
Conceptual diagram showing cellular resources directed toward growth/proliferation vs. maintenance/repair.
When IGF-1 is dialed down, resources shift from growth mode to maintenance mode.
The Bottom Line
The 1993 worm discovery revealed something profound: aging has a control switch. That switch involves IGF-1 signaling. And while you can't rewrite your genes, the same pathway that genetic mutations influence can potentially be influenced by what you eat.
In Chapter Two, we'll explore exactly how diet affects IGF-1 - specifically, why the type of protein you consume matters far more than most people realize, and why changes can happen remarkably fast.
Chapter 1 Quiz
Test Your Understanding
Optional • 4 questions
Question 1
What did Cynthia Kenyon's 1993 discovery reveal?
A) A single gene mutation could double lifespan by affecting the IGF-1 pathway
B) Aging is entirely random and uncontrollable
C) Only calorie restriction can extend lifespan
D) Worms and humans have completely different aging mechanisms
Reveal Answer
Answer: A) A single gene mutation could double lifespan by affecting the IGF-1 pathway
The discovery showed aging is controlled by specific pathways (IGF-1 signaling) conserved across species, not random cellular decay.
Question 2
Why is studying children of centenarians so important for understanding IGF-1?
A) They have higher IGF-1, proving it's protective
B) They have identical IGF-1 to everyone else
C) They have lower IGF-1 than peers their age, suggesting low IGF-1 causes longevity rather than resulting from it
D) They can't be studied due to privacy concerns
Reveal Answer
Answer: C) They have lower IGF-1 than peers their age, suggesting low IGF-1 causes longevity rather than resulting from it
By comparing centenarians' offspring to age-matched controls, researchers showed low IGF-1 is inherited and precedes longevity.
Question 3
What explains the connection between height and cancer risk?
A) Tall people have weaker immune systems
B) Larger bodies have more cells (more cancer opportunities) and the elevated IGF-1 that promotes height also promotes cell proliferation
C) Height has no relationship to cancer
D) Only extremely tall people face increased risk
Reveal Answer
Answer: B) Larger bodies have more cells (more cancer opportunities) and the elevated IGF-1 that promotes height also promotes cell proliferation
Each additional inch of height correlates with about 6% higher cancer mortality, likely due to more cells and ongoing elevated IGF-1 signaling.
Question 4
What is the fundamental trade-off that lower IGF-1 signaling represents?
A) Shifting resources from growth/proliferation to maintenance/repair
B) Less muscle mass for longer life
C) Reduced immune function for cancer protection
D) Lower energy levels for disease resistance
Reveal Answer
Answer: A) Shifting resources from growth/proliferation to maintenance/repair
When IGF-1 is dialed down, the body shifts from "growth mode" to "maintenance mode," directing energy toward cellular repair rather than proliferation.
Key Takeaways
- • Calorie restriction doesn't lower IGF-1 in humans - unlike in mice, simply eating less doesn't work. It's specifically protein intake that drives IGF-1.
- • Animal protein is the primary culprit - dairy, eggs, and poultry raise IGF-1 significantly; the effect is rapid and well-documented.
- • Plant protein doesn't trigger the same response - due to differences in amino acid profiles, plant proteins don't signal your liver to pump out growth hormones.
- • Changes happen fast - IGF-1 levels can drop significantly within two weeks of dietary change.
- • Soy is a middle ground - whole soy foods appear safe and are consumed daily by the world's longest-lived populations.
The Calorie Myth: Why Eating Less Isn't Enough
If you've followed longevity research, you've heard about calorie restriction. Eat less, live longer. It works reliably in mice, rats, and other lab animals - partly by lowering IGF-1.
So researchers tested it in humans. They studied people practicing serious, sustained calorie restriction and waited for IGF-1 levels to drop.
They're still waiting.
The Human Difference
Here's the uncomfortable finding: in humans, calorie restriction alone doesn't lower IGF-1. You can cut calories significantly, sustain it for years, and your IGF-1 won't budge.
Split comparison: Mice show IGF-1 decline with calorie restriction vs.
Humans show no IGF-1 change despite sustained calorie restriction
Researchers discovered the answer when they looked at what people were eating, not just how much. They could only get IGF-1 to decrease when protein intake was specifically reduced - cut from typical Western quantities toward recommended levels.
Total calories didn't matter much. It was the protein.
But not just any protein. As we'll see, the source matters enormously. Two people eating identical amounts of protein can have very different IGF-1 levels depending on where that protein comes from.
Animal Protein: The Primary Driver
The research points clearly in one direction: animal protein raises IGF-1. Plant protein doesn't - at least not nearly as much.
Here's the striking finding: people who avoid meat, eggs, and dairy have significantly lower IGF-1 levels even when eating more total protein than recommended. They're exceeding protein guidelines, yet their IGF-1 is lower than average.
The Two-Week Turnaround
When people switch to a plant-based diet, IGF-1 levels can drop significantly in less than two weeks.
Not months. Not years.
Fourteen days.
This rapid response tells us something important: IGF-1 isn't like arterial plaque that builds over decades. It's a hormone responding dynamically to what you're eating right now. Change your diet, and your IGF-1 starts changing within days.
An important nuance: just adding plant foods to your existing diet doesn't help much. Neither does cutting red meat while keeping fish and poultry. The IGF-1 reduction requires actually reducing animal protein, not just adding plants on top.
The Specific Culprits
Dairy
Dairy is perhaps the most well-documented. Multiple randomized controlled trials show dairy raises IGF-1 within a single week. The statistical relationship has a P-value of 10-27 - meaning the probability this is coincidental is essentially zero.
Why so potent? Bovine IGF-1 is chemically identical to human IGF-1 and isn't destroyed by pasteurization. When you drink milk, you may be directly absorbing growth hormones. This makes biological sense - milk exists to make baby mammals grow rapidly.
Poultry
Poultry surprises many people. Even a single daily serving of chicken breast significantly raises IGF-1. Research suggests chicken may be as problematic as red meat for this pathway - possibly worse. Switching from beef to chicken for heart health may help, but for IGF-1? Minimal benefit.
Eggs
Eggs - specifically egg white protein - appear particularly potent. Replacing just 3 percent of calories from egg protein with plant protein is associated with 24 percent lower risk of premature death in men and 21 percent in women. A remarkably small substitution for such a significant effect.
What About Fish?
The Surprising Truth About Seafood and IGF-1
If you've been following the evidence on animal protein and IGF-1, you're probably wondering: What about fish?
It's a fair question. We've been told for decades that fish is the "healthy" animal protein - good for your heart, your brain, your joints. And much of that is true. But when it comes to IGF-1, the answer might surprise you.
What the Largest Study Found
The UK Biobank study - following over 438,000 people -provides the clearest picture we have. When researchers measured IGF-1 levels against food intake, here's what stood out:
IGF-1 Increase (≥2x/week vs. never)
Oily fish (salmon, mackerel)
+1.25 nmol/L
Non-oily fish (cod, tilapia)
+1.16 nmol/L
Poultry
+0.87 nmol/L
Red meat
Smaller, less consistent
Vegetables/fruit
Minimal effect
UK Biobank data showing fish with the strongest IGF-1 association of all food groups tested
That's not a typo. In this massive study, fish showed the strongest association with higher IGF-1 of any food group tested - even stronger than chicken.
Source: Watling CZ et al. "Associations between food group intakes and circulating insulin-like growth factor-I in the UK Biobank." European Journal of Nutrition, 2022.
But Wait - What About Omega-3s?
Here's where it gets interesting. You might expect oily fish (rich in omega-3 fatty acids) to behave differently than lean white fish. But they don't - at least not when it comes to IGF-1.
Both oily and non-oily fish raised IGF-1 by similar amounts. The researchers concluded that "other compounds present in fish, such as the high protein content, might explain this association" rather than the omega-3 fats.
Clinical trials on fish oil supplements tell a similar story. Some actually found that omega-3 supplementation increased IGF-1 levels in certain populations.
How Fish Compares to Other Animal Proteins
The full picture from multiple studies:
Strongest IGF-1 Drivers
- • Dairy (especially milk) - most consistent across all studies
- • Fish and seafood - surprisingly potent in large studies
- • Eggs - significant in substitution analyses
Moderate IGF-1 Drivers
- • Poultry
- • Red meat (more variable)
IGF-1 Neutral or Lowering
- • Legumes, beans, lentils
- • Whole grains
- • Nuts and seeds
- • Vegetables
The Pescatarian Problem
If you've adopted a pescatarian diet thinking it would meaningfully lower your IGF-1, the evidence suggests otherwise.
Studies comparing meat-eaters, vegetarians, and vegans consistently find:
13% lower IGF-1
Vegans
~0% difference
Vegetarians/Pescatarians
- baseline
Meat-eaters
IGF-1 levels by diet type: Only vegans show significant reduction;
pescatarians plateau at similar levels to meat-eaters
Only complete elimination of animal protein significantly lowered IGF-1.
Pescatarians looked metabolically similar to meat-eaters.
So Should You Stop Eating Fish?
Not necessarily. Here's the nuanced view:
The Case for Fish
- ✓ Omega-3s reduce inflammation through separate pathways
- ✓ Associated with lower cardiovascular mortality
- ✓ 22% lower Type 2 diabetes risk (UK Biobank)
- ✓ May support brain health and cognitive function
The Case for Caution
- ! Fish raises IGF-1 similarly to other animal proteins
- ! Cancer-protective low-IGF-1 benefits require near-complete animal protein reduction
- ! Heavy metal and environmental contaminant concerns
The Bottom Line on Fish and IGF-1
Here's what we can say with reasonable confidence:
Fish is animal protein. Like all animal proteins, it triggers IGF-1 production in your liver.
The mechanism is the amino acid profile. Fish protein closely resembles human protein - the same reason other animal proteins raise IGF-1.
Omega-3s don't offset this effect. The cardiovascular benefits of fish oil operate through inflammation pathways, not IGF-1.
Pescatarian ≠ low IGF-1. Studies show pescatarians have similar IGF-1 levels to meat-eaters.
Context matters. If you're eating fish instead of processed meat, you're probably still making a net-positive health choice - just not for IGF-1 specifically.
For those focused on longevity through IGF-1 optimization, the evidence points toward plant-based protein sources: legumes, whole grains, nuts, seeds, and whole soy foods. Fish can certainly be part of a healthy diet, but it doesn't get a free pass when it comes to growth hormone signaling.
Your liver "scans" incoming protein and responds based on
how closely the amino acid profile matches human tissue
But why does fish - despite its omega-3 benefits - trigger the same IGF-1 response as beef, chicken, or dairy? The answer lies in how your liver "reads" different protein sources. And that's where a simple childhood toy helps explain everything...
Quick Reference: Study Citations
UK Biobank (Watling 2022) — n=438,453 ↗
Fish showed strongest IGF-1 association of all food groups
EPIC Study (Rinaldi 2006) — n=4,731 ↗
IGF-I, IGFBP-3 and breast cancer risk in European women
Allen et al. 2002 — n=292 ↗
Vegans 13% lower IGF-1 than vegetarians and meat-eaters
Giovannucci 2005 — n=226 ↗
Fish/seafood modestly associated with higher IGF-1 (P=0.07)
NHS/HPFS (Song 2022) — n=14,709 ↗
Replacing plant with fish protein lowered protective IGFBP-1
Gholamhoseini 2015 (Omega-3 RCT) ↗
ω-3 fatty acids modulated IGF1 and IGFBP3 in men with CVD
The "Tinker Toy" Explanation
Why Plant Protein Is Different
You might wonder: isn't protein just protein? Doesn't it all break down into the same amino acids?
Yes and no. And the "no" explains everything.
It's About Proportions, Not Completeness
Here's a fact that surprises many people: virtually all proteins - plant and animal - are "complete," containing all nine essential amino acids. Beans, grains, meat, eggs - they all provide what you need.
The difference isn't which amino acids are present. It's the proportions.
When nutrition experts talk about "high-quality" protein, they mean how closely a food's amino acid proportions match human protein. The closer the match, the "higher quality."
Here's the uncomfortable truth: the only truly "perfect protein" for humans would be human protein. The next closest match? Other animals - especially other mammals.
Your Liver's Response
Imagine you're building a structure from blocks. In one scenario, you receive perfectly sized cubes - you stack them immediately. In another, you receive pyramids that must be disassembled and rebuilt. Both contain the same raw materials, but your "construction crew" responds very differently.
When animal protein hits your liver, it's like receiving ready-to-use blocks. Your liver thinks: "Perfect building materials! Time to grow!" It pumps out IGF-1 to signal cells throughout your body to start dividing.
Diagram showing: Animal protein → Liver recognizes "ready-to-use" amino acid profile →
Strong IGF-1 signal vs. Plant protein → Different proportions → Weaker growth signal
Plant proteins can be broken down and used for everything your body needs. But the amino acid proportions don't match human tissue as closely. The "ready-to-use" signal is weaker. Your liver doesn't flood your bloodstream with growth commands.
What About Muscle Building?
Here's what surprised researchers: this doesn't actually affect muscle development.
People with abnormally high IGF-1 (a condition called acromegaly) aren't unusually muscular. Studies where people received IGF-1 injections twice daily for a year showed no increase in lean mass or muscle strength.
The IGF-1 signal isn't specifically about muscle - it's about cell proliferation generally. For actual muscle building, adequate protein intake and resistance training matter far more than IGF-1 levels.
The trade-off isn't "plant protein for longevity, animal protein for fitness."
Plant protein delivers both.
What About Soy?
Soy's amino acid profile is more similar to animal proteins than most plants. Does that mean it raises IGF-1 like meat does?
The answer: sort of, but not really. Soy occupies interesting middle ground.
The Research Findings
Studies consistently show soy protein falls between animal proteins and other plant proteins. It doesn't significantly raise IGF-1 like meat, but doesn't lower it as dramatically as switching to beans or lentils.
A Stanford study illustrated this: people switching from regular meat to plant-based alternatives (Beyond Meat products made from soy and pea protein) saw only a 3 percent drop in IGF-1. Much less than switching to whole-food plant proteins.
Horizontal spectrum showing IGF-1 response by protein source:
Meat/Dairy (highest) → Soy (middle) → Lentils/Beans (lowest)
Whole Foods vs. Supplements
There's an important distinction between soy protein supplements and whole soy foods.
High-dose soy protein supplements (around 40 grams daily) can raise IGF-1. But eating a couple of servings of actual soy foods does not. The threshold appears to be around 25 grams of soy protein - below that, whole soy foods seem neutral or beneficial.
The Longevity Population Evidence
Here's what matters most: the two longest-lived formally studied populations on Earth - Okinawan Japanese and vegetarian Seventh-day Adventists in California - both eat soy foods daily.
If soy were problematic, you'd see some signal in these populations. Instead, you see the opposite. A systematic review found 12 percent reduction in breast cancer death associated with each daily 5-gram increase in soy protein intake. That's roughly three-quarters cup of soymilk.
The Practical Takeaway
If your goal is minimizing IGF-1, the most effective strategy is replacing animal protein with non-soy plant proteins - lentils, chickpeas, whole grains, nuts, seeds.
If you enjoy tofu, tempeh, or edamame, there's no need to avoid them. Whole soy foods are associated with positive health outcomes and don't appear to raise IGF-1 when consumed in normal amounts.
What won't help much: switching from beef to a Beyond Burger expecting major IGF-1 benefits. Other benefits, yes. This pathway, not so much.
How Fast Can Things Change?
One of the most encouraging findings: these dietary changes work quickly.
In one study, just eleven days of reducing animal protein caused:
20%
IGF-1 levels
dropped
50%
IGF-1 binding protein
jumped
Line graph showing day-by-day changes in IGF-1 levels and binding protein
over the 11-day dietary intervention period
This isn't a situation requiring years of patience. Your body responds to dietary signals within days. Every meal is an opportunity to influence this pathway.
Of course, the reverse is also true. Resume eating animal protein, and IGF-1 rises back up. This isn't a one-time fix - it's an ongoing pattern. But the system's responsiveness means change is always possible.
The Bottom Line
The dietary lever for IGF-1 is clear: animal protein raises it, plant protein doesn't. The effect is rapid, well-documented across multiple study types, and reversible in both directions.
You don't need to be perfect. Research shows that even reducing animal protein - not eliminating it - can lower IGF-1. Women with BRCA mutations (high breast cancer risk) saw IGF-1 improvements from simply eating less animal protein, without going fully plant-based.
In Chapter Three, we'll explore why this matters so much - specifically, how IGF-1 promotes cancer at virtually every stage of development, and what the remarkable Laron syndrome population teaches us about living nearly cancer-free.
Chapter 2 Quiz
Test Your Understanding
Optional • 4 questions
Question 1
Why doesn't calorie restriction lower IGF-1 in humans like it does in mice?
A) Humans have a completely different IGF-1 system
B) Human IGF-1 is entirely genetic and can't be changed
C) Calorie restriction only works after 10+ years
D) In humans, it's specifically protein intake - not total calories - that drives IGF-1 production
Reveal Answer
Answer: D) In humans, it's specifically protein intake - not total calories - that drives IGF-1 production
Studies of calorie-restriction practitioners showed IGF-1 only dropped when protein intake was specifically reduced. The source of that protein matters even more than the amount.
Question 2
How quickly can dietary changes affect IGF-1 levels?
A) 6-12 months minimum
B) 3-5 years
C) Less than two weeks - IGF-1 can drop 20% within 11 days
D) Changes are not possible through diet
Reveal Answer
Answer: C) Less than two weeks - IGF-1 can drop 20% within 11 days
Research shows IGF-1 responds rapidly to dietary changes. Within eleven days of reducing animal protein, IGF-1 dropped 20% and IGF-1 binding protein increased 50%.
Question 3
Why do animal proteins trigger a stronger IGF-1 response than plant proteins?
A) Animal proteins' amino acid proportions closely match human tissue, signaling "abundant growth resources" to the liver
B) Animal proteins have more total amino acids
C) Plant proteins are incomplete and lack essential nutrients
D) Animal proteins are digested faster
Reveal Answer
Answer: A) Animal proteins' amino acid proportions closely match human tissue, signaling "abundant growth resources" to the liver
The liver responds to animal protein like receiving "ready-to-use" building blocks because the amino acid profile closely matches human protein. Plant proteins contain all essential amino acids but in different proportions, triggering a weaker growth signal.
Question 4
What does the evidence say about soy and IGF-1?
A) All soy dramatically raises IGF-1 like meat does
B) Whole soy foods appear safe and don't raise IGF-1 at normal intake levels; the longest-lived populations eat soy daily
C) Soy should be completely avoided for longevity
D) Soy lowers IGF-1 more than any other food
Reveal Answer
Answer: B) Whole soy foods appear safe and don't raise IGF-1 at normal intake levels; the longest-lived populations eat soy daily
Soy falls in the middle - it doesn't raise IGF-1 like meat but doesn't lower it like other plant proteins. Whole soy foods at normal intake appear safe, and populations like Okinawan Japanese who eat soy daily are among the world's longest-lived.
Key Takeaways
- • Your body replaces 50 billion cells daily - in adulthood, net cell growth beyond replacement isn't healthy. It's called cancer.
- • IGF-1 promotes cancer at every stage - from initial transformation to metastasis, it fuels unwanted cell proliferation throughout the process.
- • People with lifelong IGF-1 deficiency are nearly cancer-proof - the Laron syndrome population has ~100x lower cancer rates with zero cancer deaths.
- • Centenarians have peculiar cancer resistance - after age 85-90, cancer risk actually drops, likely due to lower IGF-1.
- • The fundamental trade-off is growth vs. maintenance - lower IGF-1 shifts resources from proliferation to repair, which is where longevity happens.
Your Body's Daily Renovation Project
Here's a remarkable fact about your body: you destroy and recreate nearly your entire body weight in cells every single year.
About 50 billion cells die each day. About 50 billion new ones are born to replace them. It's a constant renovation project happening beneath your awareness.
During childhood and puberty, you need net cell growth - more cells created than destroyed. You're literally building your body. IGF-1 is essential during this phase.
But once you're fully grown, the equation changes. You still need cell replacement - that's the 50 billion daily. What you don't need is net growth. Extra cells beyond replacement have another name: tumors.
Split illustration: Left side shows healthy cell replacement (renovation)
Right side shows unwanted net growth (additions = tumors)
The Problem with "Grow" Signals in Adulthood
IGF-1 is your body's primary "grow and divide" signal. When it stays elevated after you've finished developing, cells continue receiving the message to proliferate.
Your body has natural wisdom about this. IGF-1 levels decline as you age - possibly a built-in protective mechanism. But diet can override this natural downregulation, keeping IGF-1 elevated when it should be low.
The result? Cells that keep getting the "grow" signal when they should be in maintenance mode.
How IGF-1 Promotes Cancer at Every Stage
IGF-1 isn't just about tumor size. It facilitates cancer at virtually every step of the process - from the initial transformation of a normal cell into a cancerous one, all the way to distant metastasis.
The Complete List
Research has identified IGF-1's involvement in:
- → Transforming normal cells into cancer cells.
- → Promoting cancer cell survival, proliferation, and self-renewal.
- → Helping cancer cells separate from the main tumor.
- → Enabling infiltration of surrounding tissues.
- → Facilitating invasion of the bloodstream.
- → Assisting metastasis to bone, liver, lung, brain, and lymph nodes.
- → Helping new tumors establish their blood supply.
That's not one or two steps.
That's the entire cancer progression pathway.
Flow diagram showing IGF-1's role at each stage: Normal cell → Transformation →
Proliferation → Separation → Infiltration → Bloodstream → Metastasis → New tumor establishment
The Numbers
The Harvard Nurses' Health Study found that premenopausal women in the upper third of IGF-1 levels had nearly five times the risk of developing breast cancer compared to those in the lower third.
Higher IGF-1 is also linked to increased risk of colorectal, prostate, lung, ovarian, and pancreatic cancers.
Here's an important point: those with lower IGF-1 are less likely to get cancer in the first place. And cancer survivors with lower IGF-1 levels live longer. As researchers note, "It's not the original tumor that tends to kill you; it's the metastases." IGF-1 fuels both.
Historical context: Before chemotherapy existed, surgeons would treat advanced breast cancer by removing not just the ovaries but also operating on the brain to remove the pituitary gland - which orchestrates growth hormone production. They were essentially trying to shut down IGF-1 signaling through surgery.
The Laron Syndrome Natural Experiment
Sometimes nature provides the perfect experiment. Laron syndrome is one of those gifts to science.
The Population
Laron syndrome is a genetic condition causing severe, lifelong IGF-1 deficiency. The largest known population lives in a remote area of Ecuador - descendants of Jews who fled the Spanish Inquisition in the fifteenth century and brought the gene mutation with them.
These individuals have very low IGF-1 throughout their entire lives. They're also short in stature (growth requires IGF-1). But here's what makes them remarkable for cancer research:
The Stunning Finding
Among nearly 500 people with Laron syndrome, only one case of non-lethal cancer has ever been documented.
1
cancer case
(non-lethal)
500
people studied
with Laron syndrome
Visual comparison: 500 dots representing Laron syndrome population with 1 highlighted dot
vs. general population dot grid showing expected cancer rates (~100x higher)
That's a cancer rate approximately 100 times lower than the general population. And zero cancer deaths.
The explanation is straightforward: without IGF-1 around, tumors may simply not be able to grow and spread. Most malignant tumors are covered in IGF-1 receptors - they need the growth signal to thrive. Remove the signal, and cancer appears unable to gain a foothold.
The Implication
We obviously can't eliminate IGF-1 entirely - nor would we want to. But the Laron population demonstrates what's possible at the extreme end of IGF-1 reduction.
The hopeful implication: we may not need genetic mutations to achieve some of these protective effects. Dietary intervention can meaningfully reduce IGF-1 signaling - not to Laron syndrome levels, but enough to potentially shift cancer risk.
Centenarian Cancer Resistance
Here's something counterintuitive: cancer risk doesn't keep climbing indefinitely as you age.
The Surprising Pattern
Cancer risk increases every year from early adulthood onward. At age 65, you're about 100 times more likely to have a tumor than at age 35. This makes sense - more time means more opportunities for mutations to accumulate.
But then something changes.
Around ages 85-90, cancer risk begins to drop.
Line graph showing cancer mortality by age: Rising curve from 35-85,
then unexpected decline after 85-90 - highlighting the "centenarian dip"
~40%
cancer mortality
ages 50s-60s
~4%
cancer mortality
centenarians
Centenarians appear 10 times less likely to die from malignant tumors than people in their fifties and sixties.
The IGF-1 Connection
What explains this peculiar cancer resistance in the very old?
Lower IGF-1 signaling appears to be a major factor. Centenarians tend to have lower IGF-1 levels. Those who reach extreme old age may have had lower IGF-1 throughout their lives - conferring both the cancer resistance that let them survive to old age and the continued protection that keeps them alive once there.
This creates a selection effect: people with higher IGF-1 are more likely to die of cancer before reaching 100. Those who make it to centenarian status have already demonstrated, through survival, that their biology favors lower cancer risk.
The Dual Benefit
This research suggests that lowering IGF-1 could provide a double benefit:
Reduced cancer risk at every age
Increased likelihood of reaching exceptional longevity
The same intervention addresses both goals.
You're not trading one for the other.
Growth Mode vs. Maintenance Mode
The Fundamental Trade-Off
Everything we've discussed points to a fundamental biological trade-off that shapes both cancer risk and longevity.
Two Operational Modes
Your body essentially has two modes:
Growth Mode
Energy and resources go toward building new tissue, cell division, and proliferation. Essential during development. Potentially dangerous in adulthood.
Maintenance Mode
Energy and resources go toward repairing existing cells, fixing DNA damage, clearing cellular debris. This is where longevity happens.
IGF-1 is the switch between these modes.
High IGF-1 keeps you in growth mode. Low IGF-1 shifts you toward maintenance mode.
The Evolutionary Logic
This trade-off makes evolutionary sense. An organism can invest resources in rapid growth and reproduction, or in cellular maintenance and repair. Energy spent on one isn't available for the other.
In the wild, where most animals die young from predation, accidents, or starvation, investing heavily in growth and reproduction makes sense. Living long enough for cancer to matter wasn't a realistic concern.
But humans in modern environments face different pressures. We've eliminated most early mortality risks. Now the diseases of aging - cancer chief among them - are what limit our lifespans.
The Actionable Insight
When growth hormone signaling (via IGF-1) is dialed down, the body shifts priorities from growth to maintenance and repair. This shift may be, as researchers suggest, "nature's way of sustaining us into old age."
The natural decline in IGF-1 as we age appears protective. The problem is when diet keeps IGF-1 artificially elevated, overriding our body's wisdom.
Lower IGF-1 essentially tells your body: "Stop building new cells and start maintaining what you have." For an adult, that's exactly the right message.
The Bottom Line
IGF-1's role in cancer is now well-established. It promotes the disease at every stage, from initial transformation to lethal metastasis. Natural experiments like Laron syndrome show what's possible when IGF-1 is dramatically reduced - near-complete cancer protection.
Centenarians demonstrate that lower IGF-1 signaling contributes to both cancer resistance and exceptional longevity. The growth-vs-maintenance trade-off explains why: energy directed toward cellular repair rather than proliferation keeps existing cells healthy while reducing opportunities for cancer to develop.
In the final chapter, we'll bring everything together with practical recommendations - including specific mortality statistics, the remarkable speed of dietary intervention, and important nuances about how protein needs may change after age 65.
Chapter 3 Quiz
Test Your Understanding
Optional • 4 questions
Question 1
Why is net cell growth problematic in adulthood?
A) Adults don't need any new cells
B) Adult cells can't divide properly
C) Cell replacement is normal, but net growth beyond replacement is essentially what cancer is
D) Net cell growth only matters after age 70
Reveal Answer
Answer: C) Cell replacement is normal, but net growth beyond replacement is essentially what cancer is
Adults need constant cell replacement (about 50 billion cells daily), but net growth - more cells created than destroyed - means tumors. IGF-1 promotes this unwanted proliferation.
Question 2
What does the Laron syndrome population teach us about IGF-1 and cancer?
A) High IGF-1 protects against cancer in certain genetic backgrounds
B) Cancer is purely genetic and unrelated to hormones
C) Lifelong IGF-1 deficiency results in ~100x lower cancer rates with zero cancer deaths
D) IGF-1 only affects childhood cancers
Reveal Answer
Answer: C) Lifelong IGF-1 deficiency results in ~100x lower cancer rates with zero cancer deaths
Among nearly 500 people with Laron syndrome (lifelong IGF-1 deficiency), only one non-lethal cancer case was ever documented. This natural experiment demonstrates IGF-1's essential role in cancer development.
Question 3
What happens to cancer risk after ages 85-90?
A) It actually begins to decrease - centenarians are 10x less likely to die from cancer than people in their 50s-60s
B) It plateaus but doesn't decrease
C) It continues increasing exponentially
D) Cancer becomes 100% fatal
Reveal Answer
Answer: A) It actually begins to decrease - centenarians are 10x less likely to die from cancer than people in their 50s-60s
Cancer risk drops after 85-90. Centenarians have only ~4% cancer mortality versus ~40% for people in their fifties and sixties - likely due to lower IGF-1 signaling throughout their lives.
Question 4
What is the "growth vs. maintenance" trade-off?
A) You must choose between muscle growth and cardiovascular health
B) Energy invested in cell proliferation isn't available for cellular repair - lower IGF-1 shifts resources toward maintenance, where longevity happens
C) Growth mode is always superior for health
D) Maintenance mode only activates during sleep
Reveal Answer
Answer: B) Energy invested in cell proliferation isn't available for cellular repair - lower IGF-1 shifts resources toward maintenance, where longevity happens
The body allocates resources between growth (cell proliferation) and maintenance (cellular repair). Lower IGF-1 shifts priorities toward maintenance - explaining why reduced IGF-1 extends lifespan and reduces cancer risk.
Key Takeaways
- • The mortality data is striking - high animal protein intake in middle age is associated with 75% higher overall mortality and 4x higher cancer death risk.
- • Your blood's cancer-fighting ability changes rapidly - within weeks of dietary change, blood becomes measurably better at suppressing cancer cell growth.
- • The rules change after age 65 - adequate protein becomes more important to prevent frailty, though plant sources remain preferable.
- • You don't need to be perfect - even partial reductions in animal protein yield measurable benefits; small substitutions matter.
- • The practical target - approximately 0.8g protein per kg body weight, prioritizing plant sources like legumes, whole grains, nuts, and seeds.
The Mortality Numbers That Made Headlines
We've discussed the mechanisms. Now let's look at what happens to actual human lifespans.
A landmark study led by longevity researchers including Valter Longo followed a nationally representative sample of thousands of Americans over age 50 for eighteen years. The findings made international headlines.
The Core Finding
People under 65 with high protein intakes had:
75%
increase in
overall mortality
4×
increase in
cancer death risk
That's not a small effect. A fourfold increase in cancer death risk puts high animal protein consumption in the same risk category as major known carcinogens.
The Crucial Detail
When researchers analyzed the data by protein source, the mortality risk was limited to animal protein consumption. Plant protein didn't carry the same risk.
The sponsoring university summarized the finding memorably: "That chicken wing you're eating could be as deadly as a cigarette." The researchers estimated the amount of life lost from each burger as equivalent to smoking two cigarettes.
Visual comparison: 1 burger = 2 cigarettes in terms of life expectancy impact
Showing the striking risk equivalence between high animal protein and smoking
The Substitution Effect
You don't need dramatic dietary overhauls to see benefits. The research shows that even small substitutions matter:
Replacing 5% of animal protein with plant protein:
14% lower premature death risk (19% lower for dementia)
Replacing 3% of egg protein with plant protein:
24% lower premature death in men, 21% in women
Vegetable-based low-carb diets:
Lower mortality
Animal-based low-carb diets:
23% higher premature death, 28% higher cancer death
Five percent of calories is a remarkably small change
for a 14 percent mortality reduction.
Your Blood's Cancer-Fighting Power
Here's where the science becomes visceral: researchers can actually measure how well your blood suppresses cancer cell growth. And that ability changes based on what you eat.
The Ornish Trial
Dr. Dean Ornish conducted a randomized controlled trial with men who had early-stage, non-aggressive prostate cancer. One group adopted a plant-based diet and lifestyle program. The other continued their usual habits.
The results after one year:
8×
The plant-based group's blood was nearly eight times better
at suppressing cancer cell growth in laboratory dishes.
Not 8 percent better. Eight times.
Illustration showing blood samples from plant-based dieters dripped onto cancer cells
vs. standard diet - demonstrating the dramatic difference in cancer suppression
Even more striking: biopsies showed actual genetic changes. Cancer growth genes were downregulated - essentially switched off at the DNA level.
And this was achieved without chemotherapy, surgery, or radiation. Just diet and lifestyle.
The Mechanism
The effect traces directly to IGF-1. Reduced animal protein intake lowers IGF-1 and increases IGF-1 binding protein (which neutralizes circulating IGF-1).
Researchers demonstrated this elegantly: they took blood from people eating plant-based and dripped it onto cancer cells in petri dishes. The blood suppressed cancer growth 30 percent better than before the dietary change.
Then they added back the IGF-1 that had been eliminated by plant-based eating. The cancer-fighting benefit disappeared. Cancer cell growth came surging back.
The Timeline
How quickly does this happen?
11 DAYS
IGF-1 drops by 20%
IGF-1 binding protein increases by 50%
WEEKS
Blood becomes measurably better at suppressing cancer
MONTHS
Genetic changes in cancer-related genes become detectable
This isn't a decades-long process.
Your body responds to dietary signals rapidly.
The Flip Side
The reverse is also true. Research shows that eating a lot of dairy after a prostate cancer diagnosis is associated with:
76%
higher
overall death risk
141%
higher risk of dying
from the cancer
The same pathway works in both directions. Every meal sends a signal.
The Age-65 Inflection Point
Everything we've discussed has an important caveat: the relationship between protein and mortality appears to change around age 65.
The Shift
In the Longo study, the association between lower protein intake and lower mortality in middle age appeared to flip after about age 65. In older adults, higher protein intake was associated with better outcomes.
This doesn't mean the IGF-1 science is wrong. It means the balance of risks changes.
Graph showing protein-mortality relationship by age: Inverse relationship before 65
(less protein = lower mortality) vs. positive relationship after 65 (more protein = better outcomes)
Why the Rules Change
Two factors likely explain this shift:
Sarcopenia
Age-related muscle loss becomes a significant health concern after 65. Muscle mass is critical for maintaining mobility, preventing falls, and preserving metabolic health. Adequate protein becomes essential for maintaining what you have.
Frailty Prevention
In older adults, the risk of being undernourished may exceed the risk of elevated IGF-1. Frail, malnourished elderly people have worse outcomes across virtually every health measure.
The Researchers' Recommendation
The same researchers who found high protein intake harmful in middle age recommended that adults over 65 consume at least 10 percent of calories from protein - about 50 grams on a 2,000-calorie diet.
The key qualifier: preferably from plants.
The goal after 65 is getting enough protein to prevent frailty while still minimizing cancer risk. Plant protein sources accomplish both.
You get the amino acids needed for muscle maintenance without the IGF-1 surge that promotes cancer.
The Balanced Approach
This isn't contradictory - it's nuanced. Before 65, the bigger risk for most people is too much animal protein driving IGF-1-related disease. After 65, inadequate protein becomes a competing concern.
At every age, plant protein sources appear preferable. What changes is the minimum threshold you should meet.
Practical Recommendations
Let's translate this research into everyday decisions.
The Protein Target
The evidence-based target for most adults under 65: approximately 0.8 grams of protein per kilogram of healthy body weight.
~45g
daily for
average-height woman
~55g
daily for
average-height man
This is actually the standard recommended daily allowance - not some restrictive target. Most Westerners significantly exceed it, particularly from animal sources.
What to Prioritize
Best plant protein sources:
Legumes (lentils, chickpeas, black beans)
Whole grains (quinoa, oats, whole wheat)
Nuts and seeds
Whole soy foods (tofu, tempeh, edamame)
These provide all essential amino acids without triggering the IGF-1 surge.
Visual pyramid or tiered chart showing: Best choices (legumes, whole grains) at top
Middle ground (whole soy) in center → Limit (dairy, eggs, poultry) at bottom
What to Limit
The biggest IGF-1 drivers, based on the research:
Dairy (especially milk) - raises IGF-1 within a week
Eggs (particularly egg whites) - small reductions yield significant mortality benefits
Poultry - as problematic as red meat for IGF-1
Red meat has other concerns (saturated fat, heme iron), but for IGF-1 specifically, chicken and eggs appear equally or more problematic.
The Realistic Approach
You don't need to be perfect. The research consistently shows that reduction matters, not just elimination.
Women with BRCA mutations (high breast cancer risk) lowered their IGF-1 by simply reducing animal products - without going fully plant-based. Every step in the right direction yields benefit.
Timeline Expectations
DAYS
IGF-1 begins dropping
2 WEEKS
Significant IGF-1 reduction measurable
MONTHS
Blood's cancer-suppressing ability measurably improved
ONGOING
Continued benefits require continued dietary pattern
This isn't a one-time intervention. It's an ongoing choice.
But the responsiveness of the system means it's never too late to start -
and every meal is an opportunity.
One Potential Booster
Interestingly, some foods may actively help lower IGF-1. Research found that seaweed (specifically alaria) reduced the IGF-1 bump from a protein load by 40 percent. While not a substitute for reducing animal protein, it suggests some foods may offer additional benefit.
The Bottom Line
The IGF-1 story connects diet to longevity through clear, well-documented mechanisms. Animal protein raises IGF-1. Elevated IGF-1 promotes cancer and accelerates aging. Lower IGF-1 shifts the body from growth mode to maintenance mode - where longevity happens.
The practical implications are straightforward:
Before 65
Moderate your protein intake, prioritize plant sources, and limit the biggest IGF-1 drivers (dairy, eggs, poultry). Even small substitutions yield meaningful mortality benefits.
After 65
Ensure adequate protein to prevent frailty (at least 50g daily), but continue prioritizing plant sources to balance muscle maintenance with cancer risk reduction.
At Any Age
Remember that changes happen rapidly. Your body is constantly responding to dietary signals. Every meal is an opportunity to influence this pathway - in either direction.
The centenarians figured this out, whether through genetics or lifestyle. The Laron syndrome population demonstrates what's possible at the extreme. And the research gives us practical tools to apply these insights without genetic luck.
The lever is in your hands.
Chapter 4 Quiz
Test Your Understanding
Optional • 4 questions
Question 1
What did the Longo study find about animal protein intake in people under 65?
A) No significant health effects
B) Effects only in people who also smoked
C) Improved longevity outcomes
D) 75% higher overall mortality and 4x higher cancer death risk
Reveal Answer
Answer: D) 75% higher overall mortality and 4x higher cancer death risk
The eighteen-year study found that high animal protein intake in middle age was associated with 75% higher overall mortality and a fourfold increase in cancer death risk. When analyzed by source, the risk was limited to animal protein.
Question 2
How quickly does blood's cancer-suppressing ability change with dietary intervention?
A) Within weeks to months - the Ornish trial showed 8x better cancer suppression after one year
B) 5-10 years minimum
C) Changes are not measurable
D) Only with pharmaceutical intervention
Reveal Answer
Answer: A) Within weeks to months - the Ornish trial showed 8x better cancer suppression after one year
In the Ornish trial, participants' blood became nearly eight times better at suppressing cancer cell growth after one year of plant-based eating. IGF-1 changes begin within days, with significant shifts in two weeks.
Question 3
Why do protein recommendations change after age 65?
A) IGF-1 becomes harmless in older adults
B) Sarcopenia (muscle loss) and frailty risk become significant concerns, making adequate protein more important
C) Cancer risk disappears entirely
D) Older adults can't digest plant protein
Reveal Answer
Answer: B) Sarcopenia (muscle loss) and frailty risk become significant concerns, making adequate protein more important
After 65, age-related muscle loss and frailty become competing health concerns. Researchers recommend at least 50g protein daily after 65 to maintain muscle mass - but still preferably from plant sources to balance both risks.
Question 4
What is the evidence-based protein target for most adults under 65?
A) As much protein as possible from any source
B) Zero protein for optimal longevity
C) Approximately 0.8g per kg body weight (~45-55g daily), prioritizing plant sources
D) Only animal protein counts toward requirements
Reveal Answer
Answer: C) Approximately 0.8g per kg body weight (~45-55g daily), prioritizing plant sources
The recommended intake is about 0.8g protein per kg body weight - roughly 45g for average women and 55g for average men. This is actually the standard RDA; most Westerners exceed it significantly, particularly from animal sources.
Scientific References
Peer-reviewed studies cited in this article
Chapter 1 - The Discovery That Changed How We Think About Aging
Kenyon et al. 1993 ↗
A C. elegans mutant that lives twice as long as wild type
Nature - Foundational discovery that daf-2 mutations double lifespan
Suh et al. 2008 ↗
Functionally significant insulin-like growth factor I receptor mutations in centenarians
PNAS - IGF-1 receptor mutations found in human centenarians
Vitale et al. 2012 ↗
Low circulating IGF-I bioactivity is associated with human longevity
Aging - Centenarians' offspring have lower IGF-1 in middle age
Vitale et al. 2019 ↗
Role of IGF-1 System in the Modulation of Longevity: Controversies and New Insights
Frontiers in Endocrinology - Comprehensive centenarian review
Chapter 2 - How What You Eat Controls Your IGF-1 Levels
Fontana et al. 2008 ↗
Long-term effects of calorie or protein restriction on serum IGF-1 and IGFBP-3
Aging Cell - Protein, not calories, drives IGF-1 in humans
Levine et al. 2014 ↗
Low Protein Intake Is Associated with a Major Reduction in IGF-1, Cancer, and Overall Mortality
Cell Metabolism - NHANES III analysis of 6,381 adults
Song et al. 2016 ↗
Association of Animal and Plant Protein Intake With All-Cause and Cause-Specific Mortality
JAMA Internal Medicine - Animal vs plant protein mortality analysis
Qin et al. 2009 ↗
Milk consumption and circulating insulin-like growth factor-I level: a systematic literature review
International Journal of Food Sciences and Nutrition - Dairy/IGF-1 systematic review
Fontana et al. 2016 ↗
Effects of 2-year calorie restriction on circulating levels of IGF-1, IGF-binding proteins and cortisol
Aging Cell - CALERIE trial results
Fish & Seafood Research
UK Biobank - Watling et al. 2022 (n=438,453) ↗
Associations between food group intakes and circulating insulin-like growth factor-I
European Journal of Nutrition - Fish showed strongest IGF-1 association
Allen et al. 2002 (n=292) ↗
The associations of diet with serum IGF-I in women meat-eaters, vegetarians, and vegans
Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention - Vegans 13% lower IGF-1
Giovannucci et al. 2005 (n=226) ↗
Nutritional predictors of insulin-like growth factor I and their relationships to cancer
American Journal of Clinical Nutrition - Fish/seafood modestly raised IGF-1
EPIC Study - Rinaldi et al. 2006 ↗
IGF-I, IGFBP-3 and breast cancer risk in women: European Prospective Investigation
International Journal of Cancer - Large European cohort analysis
Gholamhoseini et al. 2015 (Omega-3 RCT) ↗
ω-3 fatty acid differentially modulated serum levels of IGF1 and IGFBP3 in men with CVD
Nutrition - Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled study
Chapter 3 - IGF-1, Cancer, and the Aging Process
Guevara-Aguirre et al. 2011 ↗
Growth Hormone Receptor Deficiency Is Associated with a Major Reduction in Pro-Aging Signaling, Cancer, and Diabetes
Science Translational Medicine - Ecuador Laron syndrome cohort study
Shevah & Laron 2007 ↗
Congenital IGF-I deficiency tends to confer protection against postnatal development of malignancies
Pediatric Endocrinology Reviews - Israeli Laron syndrome cohort
Renehan et al. 2004 ↗
Insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I, IGF binding protein-3, and cancer risk: systematic review and meta-regression
The Lancet - Landmark IGF-1/cancer meta-analysis
UK Biobank Cancer Analysis 2020 ↗
Circulating Insulin-Like Growth Factor-1 and Risk of Total and 19 Site-specific Cancers
Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism - Large-scale cancer risk analysis
Prostate Cancer Collaborative Group 2016 ↗
A Meta-analysis of Individual Participant Data Reveals an Association between IGF-I and Prostate Cancer Risk
Cancer Research - Meta-analysis of 17 prospective studies
EPIC-Heidelberg 2023 ↗
IGF-1 and Risk of Morbidity and Mortality From Cancer, Cardiovascular Diseases, and All Causes
Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism - Most recent EPIC analysis
Chapter 4 - Putting It All Together
Milman et al. 2014 ↗
Low insulin-like growth factor-1 level predicts survival in humans with exceptional longevity
Aging Cell - Low IGF-1 associated with nonagenarian survival
Harrison et al. 2017 ↗
Does milk intake promote prostate cancer initiation or progression via effects on IGFs?
Cancer Causes & Control - Milk/IGF-1/prostate cancer pathway analysis
Romo Ventura et al. 2020 ↗
Association of dietary intake of milk and dairy products with blood concentrations of IGF-1
European Journal of Nutrition - Bavarian adult cohort study
Milk & Health Umbrella Review 2020 ↗
Milk consumption and multiple health outcomes: umbrella review of systematic reviews and meta-analyses
Advances in Nutrition - Comprehensive milk/health analysis
Additional Key Reviews
Laron Syndrome Review 2023 ↗
Endocrine-Related Cancer - Comprehensive Laron syndrome and cancer protection review
Second Primary Cancers & IGF-1 ↗
Cancer Medicine - Role of IGF-1 in development of second primary cancers
GH vs IGF-1 in Longevity 2022 ↗
Cells - Growth Hormone, Not IGF-1 Is the Key Longevity Regulator in Mammals