Plasmapheresis Startup Looking for Clinical Trial Participants SF Bay Area

I can’t say I’ve spent a lot of time talking with Dr. Kiprov. As a new patient in the clinical trial Stella, who was the main clinical trial person I interacted with, introduced me one day to Dr. Kirprov when we was in getting the treatments. I spent most of my time with Stella who did the record keeping and functional testing, then with the RNs who actually administer the plasmapheresis. There is at least one other doctor who I think oversees the clinic and I spoke with him for quite a while asking questions about the details of the trial and plasmapheresis more generally. The only other time I spoke with Dobri Kiprov was when I ran into him at the Buck Institute in December of this year and I introduced myself again and asked about when the result would be available.

I have no idea about his own use TPE or other issues. He is an older guy (I think he’s about 74 years old) and doesn’t look like he follows any sort of rigorous exercise regimen, so I suspect he could benefit from a Peter Attia like longevity program.

I talked with dr Kiprov prior to and during a couple of my treatments at his clinic. He told me he was doing TPE every two months. I didn’t find him to be brain-aged, but no spring chicken either.

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I take numerous of the well known supplements that people will write or talk about giving them very noticeable positive effects. I generally feel nothing different.

My feeling on this experience is that unless you suffer from a deficiency or have any sort of metabolic imbalance or dysfunction you wont feel much of an improvement.

I would guess that your plasmapheresis experience is uneventful because you are very healthy.

Nor does Dr. Kiprov (or COnboy lab) compare TPE to simple and Free plasma donation where it is possible to overboard 25% of your plasma. Some centers allow twice a week and regular blood banks 1x/month (in US). Doesn’t cost thousand per TPE that MDs which I suspect plays a role. Would have been easy enough to add 2 or three people to their 2022 study to make a stab at a dose resonse.

A recent trial looked at the effects of high frequency and very high frequency plasma donations in healthy adults. They didn’t look in depth at ageing biomarkers unfortunately, only at haematological changes and changs in physical performance. Apart from a significant drop in ferritin and immunoglobulin levels (the former is kinda new, the latter was well known and expected), no other observations were made.

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My ferritin drops after a sequence of plasma donations but it is on low side to begin with, But it only takes modest Fe supplementation for a few days after each donation to keep it stable. My albumin also takes a modest dip but recovers in 3 to 4 day, Will be testing some of the biomarkers mention in the 2022 Conboy paper (DNA damage Cd8+ etc.)

Interesting read by Peter Dimandis. He does it and Fountain Life is now offering it.

Full blog post here:

Young Blood & Longevity: Therapeutic Plasma Exchange (TPE) Treatments?

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I have to wonder what the typical cost for his customers for this service will be. If anyone finds out, please post it. I wonder if the prices are coming down yet. When I did this with Dobri Kirov as part of his trial it was priced at around $36K for the suite of 6 treatments.

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I have done TPE in Boca Raton-FL (by Dr. Kiprov accredited clinc). I did 4 this year and paid 5k each.

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Did you get any measurable and positive results (from blood tests, or subjectively)?

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Also, I just wanted to add this interesting note from a recent interview with Tony Wyss-Coray at Stanford U.:

Q. But it has been seen that young blood rejuvenates organs.

A. There was a study led by Tom Rando [researcher at Stanford University] that showed that young blood rejuvenates muscle stem cells. When you’re old, muscles stop regenerating because those stem cells stop doing their job. This experiment demonstrated in mice that young blood reactivates muscle stem cells. It also has an effect on other tissues, such as hematopoietic cells, which make up the immune system. We saw something similar in the brain. The other interesting observation is that with age there is an increase in inflammation throughout the body, and young blood also seems to reduce inflammation.

Q. Why?

A. We don’t know. I don’t think it’s through stem cells, but rather an active effect of blood proteins. We also know that removing plasma from an older individual is beneficial, because the body probably accumulates toxic factors over time.

Q. You and other groups are testing these effects in Alzheimer’s patients. What has been observed so far?

A. What people have tried is to remove plasma from old people and then give them young plasma**.** This same procedure, apheresis, is used in cases in which we are not clear what disease the patient has, for example autoimmune diseases, or also chronic fatigue syndrome. That seems to be beneficial.

Q. What results were seen in Alzheimer’s?

A. Grifols did a phase 2-3 trial several years ago. It showed clear benefits for patients. The ones we did with the company I co-founded, Alkahest, were not as compelling due to the small number of patients; but those from Grifols, with a double-blind and controlled trial, showed clear improvement. But no progress has been made.

Q. Why?

A. Because Grifols doesn’t have money. They had a lot of problems during the pandemic and then applied for a lot of cheap loans from the European Union and banks. Interest rates went up and now they have a lot of debt. They have also been accused of poor business practices. They don’t have money to continue with trials. Another major problem is that they couldn’t make money from this. Grifols is dedicated to selling plasma and it is a relatively cheap product. How could they charge five times more for giving it to people with Alzheimer’s?

Q. Even if this were to be transformed into a treatment, you say that it would likely be impossible to carry it out, why?

A. Because benefits have been seen not only in people with Alzheimer’s, but also other diseases. Sarcopenia [muscle loss], heart ailments. Millions of people could be treated with plasma and it would be beneficial. The problem here is that there wouldn’t be enough plasma to treat everyone. There are rich people who pay for plasma transfusions, and they have been doing so long before all this was known.

Q. Are these treatments reliable?

A. No. It probably has some benefit, but there are only anecdotal cases of improvement in general health and also in cognition. In fact, this is how Alkahest was founded. The funds were provided by a wealthy Hong Kong family. The head of the family had Alzheimer’s. He received a transfusion because he also had cancer. His grandson realized that every time his grandfather had a transfusion his memory returned and he could talk to him again. He was the one who provided the funds. [The founder was Chen Din Hwa, a billionaire of Chinese origin, who died in 2012. After seeing the extraordinary effects of the transfusions, his relatives provided the funds to create Alkahest. The company was acquired by Grifols in 2020].

Q. Is there any other way to unblock this situation?

A. Hopefully, but it is very complex. There are tens of thousands of proteins in plasma, and among them there are hundreds of thousands of different variants. We don’t know which ones we need. Here we return to the problem of the natural fountain of youth. It is possible that the rejuvenating proteins we have in our blood are in a different conformation than if we synthesized them in the laboratory. Animal experiments would have to be done for each one, but it is an enormous and very expensive challenge; we are talking about about 10,000 molecules. There are now many companies focused on identifying some of these rejuvenating factors.

Full interview here:

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As I do, like many here in this forum, several longevity approuch, i cant infer nothing in insolation that can be credited to TPE. I make because i think that make sense stay free from my old and tired plasma…Iam 72.

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Kiprov, and others, are making a good living off of something that can be done free using a similar process, plasma donation.

I don’t think there is much evidence that the plasma dilution from plasma donation is very effective. See the discussion here: Plasma Dilution - #22 by Keith

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RapAdmin, might you have anything to report?
I won’t blame you if you don’t; I missed grossly myself on making before/after tests.

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So £48,432 or $58,964.54 USD for 4 session per month for 1 year.
A total of 12 sessions at $4,913.71 USD per session.

In that UK doc they do each session in 1hr 45m so maybe not a complete oil change?

Here is, what I believe is the final paper on this clinical study I participated in:

(Open Access)

Multi-Omics Analysis Reveals Biomarkers That Contribute to Biological Age Rejuvenation in Response to Single-Blinded Randomized Placebo-Controlled Therapeutic Plasma Exchange

We conducted a randomized, placebo-controlled trial to assess the safety and biological age (BA) effects of various therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE) regimens in healthy adults over 50. Participants received bi-weekly TPE with or without intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG), monthly TPE, or placebo. Randomization was based on entry date, and treatments were blinded to maintain objectivity. Primary objectives were to assess long-term TPE safety and changes in biological clocks. Secondary goals included identifying optimal regimens. Exploratory analyses profiled baseline clinical features and longitudinal changes across the epigenome, proteome, metabolome, glycome, immune cytokines, iAge, and immune cell composition. We demonstrate in 42 individuals randomized to various treatment arms or placebo that long-term TPE was found to be safe, with only two adverse events requiring discontinuation and one related to IVIG. TPE significantly improved biological age markers, with 15 epigenetic clocks showing rejuvenation compared to placebo (FDR < 0.05). Biweekly TPE combined with intravenous immunoglobulin (TPE-IVIG) proved most effective, inducing coordinated cellular and molecular responses, reversing age-related immune decline, and modulating proteins linked to chronic inflammation. Integrative analysis identified baseline biomarkers predictive of positive outcomes, suggesting TPE-IVIG is particularly beneficial for individuals with poorer initial health status. This is the first multi-omics study to examine various TPE modalities to slow epigenetic biologic clocks, which demonstrate biological age rejuvenation and the molecular features associated with this rejuvenation.

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/acel.70103

and here are some excerpts from The NY Times article on the study:

Cars need oil changes to keep their engines running smoothly. Some anti-aging influencers, along with a handful of scientists, believe exchanging the plasma in your blood can do a similar thing for humans to help slow biological aging. The procedure is currently offered for thousands of dollars a session at many longevity clinics.

In a car, “you change the oil every 3,000 miles because it clears out debris," said Dr. Eric Verdin, the president and chief executive of the Buck Institute for Research on Aging. Your blood, he said, can also accumulate potentially damaging particles that can be flushed out.

One of the first trials examining plasma exchange for anti-aging in humans, published Tuesday in the journal Aging Cell, offers early evidence that it may be able to slow the biological breakdown that comes with age, even in otherwise healthy people. The small study of 42 participants, with an average age of 65, found that those who got plasma exchange therapy over the course of a few months had lower concentrations in their blood of the biological compounds that accumulate with age, compared with a control group. The trial was sponsored by Circulate Health, a plasma exchange startup, and coauthored by Dr. Verdin, a company co-founder and head of the scientific advisory board.

In the Circulate Health trial, one group of subjects received an albumin infusion every few weeks or so; another group got the same infusion plus an antibody to fight infections; and a control group got only saline. Researchers used dozens of biological age tests to measure subjects’ blood several times during the full three-to-six-month regimen. They estimated that the albumin and antibody group decreased their biological age by about 2.6 years, while those on the albumin regimen saw a roughly one-year reduction. People who received only saline generally saw their biological age increase over the course of the trial.

While the Circulate Health study is “intriguing,” and suggests that plasma exchange appears to affect subjects’ blood composition even after the procedure, it doesn’t necessarily mean that it will help people live longer or healthier, said Dr. Jeffrey Winters, the chair of transfusion medicine at the Mayo Clinic. He said the trial was too small to prove anti-aging benefits; it also didn’t follow subjects for more than a few months, so it’s not clear how long the effects of plasma exchange last.

In the study, the authors hypothesized that treatments could get less effective over time as the body adjusts to the infusions. (The subjects typically didn’t show much difference in biological age after the third measurement, compared with the control, suggesting that the impact of the therapy could level off.)

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/28/well/plasma-exchange-longevity.html

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Related:

and apparently they have renamed the company to Circulate Health, and here is the website:

https://www.circulate.health

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Before anyone gets too excited, I’ll just link my post from earlier

Tl;Dr - Benefits were noted at time point 2, but not at the end of the study (time point 3). In other words, no benefit at the end of the study.

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Interestingly, the article author noted this, though incorrectly. The implication of this sentence is that there was a benefit and it leveled off, when in fact there was no benefit. I suspect this study will be paraded far and wide as proof that TPE is effective, and many people will be duped into trying it.

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