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Rapamycin (Sirolimus)

An mTOR inhibitor showing lifespan extension in animal models, now under investigation for human aging.

Human Trials

15

2,500 participants

Risk Level

Medium Risk

Monthly Cost

$50$200 /month

Requires prescription. Cost varies by source – compounding pharmacies vs. retail.

Quick Facts

Category
Pharmaceutical
Research Field
Pharmacology
Evidence Grade
B- – Promising
Risk Level
Medium
Monthly Cost
$50 – $200
Human Trials
15

Typical Dose

2–6 mg once weekly (longevity biohacking protocol)

Range

1–10 mg/week

Timingonce weekly, with or without food
Formoral tablet (prescription – Rapamune/Sirolimus)
NotesPrescription only. Strongest longevity evidence of any drug (extends lifespan in mice even when started late). Weekly intermittent dosing minimizes immunosuppressive side effects. Requires physician monitoring of sirolimus blood levels, CBC, lipids. Do not take with grapefruit.

For informational purposes only – not medical advice. See disclaimer

Research Velocity

+18%
450 publications in the last 12 months · steady increase in publications
High Community Interest
450 mentions
Sources:LongecityReddit
Updated 2026-03-16

Mechanism of Action

Rapamycin inhibits the mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) complex 1, a central regulator of cell growth and metabolism. By suppressing mTOR signaling, rapamycin activates autophagy (cellular cleanup), reduces senescent cell accumulation, improves immune function at low doses, and shifts cellular metabolism toward maintenance and repair rather than growth. In animal models, these effects consistently extend lifespan across multiple species.

Overview

Rapamycin (sirolimus) is arguably the most promising pharmacological longevity intervention currently under investigation. Originally discovered in a soil sample from Easter Island (Rapa Nui), it was first developed as an immunosuppressant for organ transplant patients. Its longevity potential was revealed when the NIA's Interventions Testing Program showed it extended lifespan in mice even when started late in life.

The drug works by inhibiting mTOR (mechanistic target of rapamycin), a master regulator of cell growth. When mTOR is suppressed, cells shift from growth mode to maintenance mode – activating autophagy, reducing inflammation, and clearing damaged cellular components. This mechanism makes rapamycin one of the few interventions that directly targets a recognized hallmark of aging.

Human evidence is still limited but growing rapidly. The key insight from early human studies is that dosing matters enormously – the intermittent, low-dose protocols used in longevity contexts (typically 3-6mg once weekly) appear to have a very different risk profile than the daily high-dose regimens used in transplant medicine. Multiple clinical trials are currently underway to evaluate rapamycin specifically for aging-related endpoints.

Known Interactions

  • Immunosuppressive at high doses – longevity dosing uses lower, intermittent protocols (e.g., weekly rather than daily).
  • Grapefruit juice increases bioavailability significantly – some protocols use this intentionally.
  • May interact with other mTOR-affecting compounds (e.g., metformin also affects mTOR pathway).

Legal Status by Country

📍

Your country (United States)

FDA-approved for transplant rejection; off-label use for aging requires prescription

Rx Required
Australia
Rx Required
✈️Brazil
Rx Required
Canada
Rx Required
China
Rx Required
✈️Colombia
Rx Required
Germany
Rx Required
✈️India
Rx Required
✈️Israel
Rx Required
Japan
Rx Required
✈️Mexico
Rx Required
Netherlands
Rx Required
✈️Panama
Rx Required
Russia
Rx Required
✈️South Korea
Rx Required
Switzerland
Rx Required
✈️Thailand
Rx Required
✈️Turkey
Rx Required
✈️UAE
Rx Required
United Kingdom
Rx Required
📍United States
Rx Required

📍 = your selected country · ✈️ = medical tourism destination · Always verify current local regulations before travel.

Key Research

Where to Source·Prescription required – consult your healthcare provider

Last verified: 2026-03-14