Vladimir Putin has long cultivated an image of near-superhuman stamina, though even time, inconveniently, refuses to cooperate. Now, as per a Wall Street Journal report, Russia is pouring $26 billion into an anti-ageing program called ‘New Health Preservation Technologies.’ The idea is to slow ageing, swap out worn organs, and generally treat the human body like a very expensive machine that keeps sending repair bills.
Gene Therapies, Printed Organs and More
At the core of the project are gene therapies targeting ageing at the cellular level. Scientists are also exploring xenotransplantation—growing human organs inside pigs—and 3D bioprinting of living tissues. Early breakthroughs reportedly include printed human cartilage and a mouse thyroid gland, with hopes of eventually producing transplant-ready human organs on demand. Putin’s daughter, endocrinologist Maria Vorontsova, is involved in steering genetics research, while some scientists imagine doctors becoming ‘body mechanics’ doing routine upgrades.
Science Breakthrough or Sci-Fi Wish List?
Critics are questioning the lack of peer-reviewed evidence behind the project’s claims, suggesting that science may be racing ahead of proof. Russian bioprinting pioneer Alexander Ostrovskiy has pointed to the absence of validation in major international journals, telling the Wall Street Journal that the initiative remains, at best, “aspirational.” Meanwhile, online observers keep dissecting Putin’s public appearances for supposed signs of ill health or even body doubles. Whether it ends as a medical breakthrough or an ultra-expensive anti-ageing experiment, Russia’s message is unmistakable: ageing is no longer something it plans to accept quietly—or without scrutiny.



