Humans Haven’t Reached Full Lifespan, Study Finds

HUMANS HAVE BEEN living longer for decades, and a new study shows there is no ceiling in sight for lifespan.

A study published Friday in the journal Science found that the death rate of seniors abruptly slows around 80 years old and then plateaus at 105 years old, which they interpreted to mean that humans are not close to a biological limit on how long they can live. The researchers examined records of Italians who had reached 105 years old between 2009 and 2015 (born between 1896 and 1910). Their search resulted in 3,836 people. After verifying their age with their birth certificates, the researchers examined which of those Italians had died during the study period to determine the rate different age groups died at.

This study comes after a 2016 study by scientists at Albert Einstein College of Medicine put the maximum human lifespan at about 115 years.

The new study focused on mortality rates, which are relatively high in infancy and decrease during a person’s early years. They then go up in a person’s thirties and drastically increase when people reach their seventies and eighties, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

However, Elisabetta Barbi, a demographer at the University of Rome, and her team discovered that among very old Italians, the death rate stops rising around age 80, begins to decelerate and then plateaus after age 105, according to the study.

“If there’s a fixed biological limit, we are not close to it,” Barbi told The New York Times.