Life Elongation: China Discovers Drug That Could Stretch Human Lifespan to 150 Years
By Niger Delta Voice Reporters, Online Correspondent
16th November, 2025
China may be on the verge of rewriting the book of human existence, as a Shenzhen-based startup claims it has found a pill that could help people live up to 150 years — a dream long thought to belong to fairy tales and the realm of wishful thinking.
According to a report by the New York Times, Lonvi Biosciences, a rising star in the world of bioscience and longevity research, says it has created a revolutionary grape seed–derived pill that targets “zombie cells” — the ageing, inactive cells that fan the flames of inflammation in the body.
Like striking gold in the field of anti-ageing, the company insists this discovery might be the long-sought key to stretching human life far beyond current limits.
“This is not just another pill. This is the Holy Grail,” declared Lonvi’s CEO, Ip Zhu, hinting that the breakthrough could turn the tide in humanity’s age-old battle against time.
He stressed that the pill’s active compound, procyanidin C1 (PCC1), does more than slow ageing — it may fortify the body at the cellular level, cutting down age-related diseases and ushering in a generation that grows older without growing weaker.
“Living to 150 is definitely realistic,” added the company’s Chief Technology Officer, Lyu Qinghua, expressing confidence that what once sounded like “a bridge too far” could soon become everyday reality.
Lonvi’s internal studies revealed striking results: mice treated with the formulation lived 9.4% longer overall, and their lifespan from the moment treatment began jumped by an astonishing 64.2%. If these results translate to humans, the world may soon witness a medical revolution.
With China’s life expectancy rising to 79 years in 2024 — five years above the global average — the quest for longevity is gathering momentum. What was once a topic whispered only among wealthy elites is now becoming a national conversation.
“Nobody in China used to talk about longevity, only rich Americans,” said Gan Yu, co-founder of Shanghai-based Time Pie. “Now many Chinese are interested and have the money to extend their lives.”
In a world where time waits for no man, China seems determined to bend the hands of the clock, proving once again that when science speaks, even age-old limits may crumble.
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