Money can buy everything, the saying goes, except for good health and more years on the clock. Startup Tally Health intends to challenge that. The New York City-based biotech company wants to build a business out of slowing the impacts of aging, offering tailored suggestions to help people stay healthy—and, in turn, perhaps live longer.
The company racked up a 270,000-person waitlist ahead of its February launch, and on Thursday announced $10 million in seed funding, led by Kirsten Greene’s Forerunner Ventures and L Catterton, which incubated the company. Investors include a handful of A-list celebrities—John Legend and Chrissy Teigen, Pedro Pascal, and Zac Efron among them. Greene has also joined Tally’s board.
The brainchild of David Sinclair, a Harvard researcher on aging, and venture capitalist Whitney Casey, Tally Health sounds a bit like it came from the future. Sinclair and his team showed he could reverse the effects of aging in mice in a study published in Cell. Aging, he realized, is affected by DNA methylation—which is when a molecule called a “methyl group” is added to DNA, which can impact the genes expressed by a given cell.
“The research shows that aging can be treatable and longevity and health span can be increased,” says Melanie Goldey, Tally Health’s CEO.
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Tally Health’s longevity platform has three pillars. The first is an age test done by a cheek swab. The swabs are sent to Tally’s lab where they are analyzed to determine a client’s biological age, which may be different from their chronological age.
Next, Tally’s platform creates personalized recommendations for clients based on their test results and a lifestyle survey of their diet, fitness, and mental health. The platform lists the potential impact of each change but also creates a list so people have options if, say, they don’t want to give up wine with dinner. Tally also has a daily supplement (unlike the lifestyle recommendations, the supplement is one-size-fits-all) with five different ingredients that target the hallmarks of aging. “By far the most impactful part is the lifestyle changes,” Goldey says.
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Clients can take the aging test every three months to see how the supplement and lifestyle changes have impacted their health. Tally Health costs $199 a month for one test, a month of supplements, and the personalized recommendations. The company also offers plans that cost $159 per month for six months, or $129 per month for a yearlong subscription—offering an alternative to pricey anti-aging clinics. Tally declined to disclose the number of tests it has processed since launch but states that it has thousands of customers.
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Goldey says the company’s test algorithm was developed using DNA methylation data from 8,000 people between the ages of 18 and 100—divided equally by gender and comprised 30% of BIPOC participants—in a beta study that began last June. Many participants converted into members when Tally launched and have just received their second test.
“Everyone ages,” Goldey says. “We want to have a personal approach that helps people stay happy and healthy and have the highest-quality years that they can.”
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