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Why AI-Enabled ‘Dirty Drugs’ are Future for Longevity Medicine

BioSpectrum Asia

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BioSpectrum Asia July 2025

Ageing is not a result of a single malfunction; it’s a gradual, systemic breakdown that touches everything. Researchers have long understood this and have mapped the tangled web of genes, pathways, enzymes, and signalling molecules involved. For decades, the pharmaceutical industry tried to simplify its way through the complexity of ageing. But now, with AI and polypharmacology, we finally have the tools to meet that complexity on its terms.

- Dr Peter Fedichev

What if a key part of the solution to Asia's looming demographic crisis lies in embracing something we in the pharmaceutical industry have long avoided, complex, multi-target, so-called 'dirty' drugs? Across the region, a slow-burning emergency is unfolding. Birth rates are plunging, life expectancy is climbing, and the population pyramid is inverting. In countries like Japan, South Korea, China, and Singapore, this is already translating into overburdened health systems, lonely older populations, frustrated youth, and stifled economic growth. The conventional tools of medicine, clean, single-target therapies, are falling short in the face of the complexity underlying chronic diseases and the ageing process itself.

Tackling them effectively demands therapies that engage multiple biological 'levers' at once, without triggering chaos. Until recently, the complexity and risk involved in designing drugs of this kind were, for all intents and purposes, unmanageable. But that is now changingemerging artificial intelligence (AI) models, particularly graph neural networks, allow us to navigate ageing's complexity and design effective, multi-target compounds with exceptional precision and efficacy.

Ageing Is a Systems Problem

Ageing is not a result of a single malfunction; it's a gradual, systemic breakdown that touches everything. Metabolic regulation slips. Immune signals misfire. Neuroendocrine rhythms falter. Regeneration slows. These aren't isolated failures; they're deeply interconnected.

Ageing researchers have long understood this. We've mapped the tangled web of genes, pathways, enzymes, and signalling molecules involved. But understanding that complexity exists is not the same as being able to address it. As with other aspects of medical research, most drug discovery efforts in longevity biotech have focused on single levers: one gene, one protein, one pathway at a time.

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