India is on the cusp of a transformative demographic shift, with its elderly population projected to surpass 347 million by the year 2050. This impending surge in aging individuals presents a critical challenge to healthcare systems, social infrastructure, and economic frameworks nationwide. Addressing this, a groundbreaking endeavor known as the BHARAT Study has recently been launched, aiming to unravel the complex biological mechanisms underlying aging within the Indian populace through a pioneering multi-modal, multi-omics approach.
The BHARAT Study, an acronym for Biomarkers of Healthy Aging, Resilience, Adversity, and Transitions, represents India’s first large-scale, discovery-driven cohort dedicated to systematically characterizing biological aging at an unprecedented resolution. Spearheaded by Dr. Suramya Asthana and Dr. Deepak Kumar Saini at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc), this project fills a notable void in the realm of aging research, which historically relies heavily on data derived from Western populations, frequently overlooking the unique genetic and environmental variables intrinsic to India.
At its core, the BHARAT Study integrates a broad spectrum of clinical, molecular, lifestyle, and environmental parameters collected across a representative cross-section of India’s highly diverse demographic landscape. Participants, selected from multiple regions representing both rural and urban environments, encompass a wide age distribution with careful balance maintained between sexes to ensure comprehensive representation. The study strategically acquires biological specimens such as blood, urine, stool, cheek swabs, and hair, which are subjected to extensive multi-omics profiling techniques including epigenomics, proteomics, metabolomics, lipidomics, metagenomics, and immune phenotyping.
This comprehensive multi-omics paradigm not only enables the dissection of age-associated molecular alterations but also facilitates the discovery of novel biomarkers that encapsulate the multifactorial nature of aging, encompassing genetic predispositions and external influences such as nutrition, infection exposure, and socio-economic factors. By generating interoperable, high-dimensional datasets amenable to mechanistic modeling and machine learning methodologies, BHARAT aims to transcend traditional population models, offering refined and globally relevant perspectives on the biology of aging.
Central to the BHARAT initiative is a sophisticated hub-and-spoke collaborative framework, with IISc serving as the nucleus for advanced laboratory analyses, centralized biobanking, and computational integration. This architecture empowers regional clinical and community partners, spread across diverse Indian states, to efficiently recruit participants, conduct thorough clinical phenotyping, and collect high-quality biospecimens. Such distributed yet coordinated collaboration is pivotal in capturing India’s extraordinary genetic heterogeneity and intricate environmental gradients, which are essential variables influencing age-related pathways.
One of the study’s paramount objectives lies in the creation of population-specific biological aging signatures and predictive models tailored explicitly for the Indian demographic context. Existing biological clocks and aging metrics, often calibrated on Western cohorts, might not accurately reflect the distinctive aging trajectories experienced by Indian populations due to variations in lifestyle, environment, and genetic architecture. Recalibrating these models is crucial to enable precise assessment of biological age, resilience, frailty, and susceptibility to age-associated diseases.
Incorporating cutting-edge artificial intelligence and machine learning algorithms, the BHARAT Study seeks to integrate multidimensional molecular data with detailed clinical and lifestyle information. This integrative analysis aims to unravel complex interactions driving aging processes and emphasize mechanisms underpinning healthy aging, deterioration, and disease vulnerability. Ultimately, these insights hold promise for developing individualized strategies for prevention, early intervention, and tailored therapeutics.
Importantly, the BHARAT Study is designed with scalability and longitudinal potential in mind. Establishing standardized reference datasets and building robust infrastructure are critical steps toward fostering continuous aging research within India’s dynamic population milieu. Such longitudinal follow-up will prove instrumental in elucidating temporal dynamics of aging biomarkers and validating intervention impacts over extended time frames.
The breadth and depth of this endeavor also position BHARAT as a resource of immense global relevance, offering data that enhance universal aging models while highlighting population-specific pathways. The study promises to accelerate precision aging research, improve risk stratification methods, and bolster the development of novel biomarker-driven diagnostic and prognostic tools, thereby shaping future healthcare policies focused on aging populations.
Beyond its scientific mandate, BHARAT exemplifies a transformative model of collaborative research in India, harnessing the synergy between centralized technological hubs and regionally distributed clinical networks. This framework ensures inclusivity, fostering equitable participation from varied socio-economic strata and geographical locales, thereby enhancing the ecological validity and translational utility of the research outcomes.
The publication of the BHARAT Study in Volume 18 of Aging-US marks a significant milestone in aging research, reflecting a concerted effort to interrogate the multifaceted nature of aging through innovative methodologies adapted to India’s unique societal fabric. As India continues its demographic transition, BHARAT’s insights will be indispensable for guiding public health strategies aimed at promoting longevity, resilience, and well-being within its vast and varied population.
For those interested in delving deeper into the insights of this transformative study, the full paper is accessible via DOI: https://doi.org/10.18632/aging.206373. Correspondence regarding the research can be directed to Dr. Deepak Kumar Saini at deepaksaini@iisc.ac.in.
Subject of Research: Not applicable
Article Title: The BHARAT study: a multi-modal, multi-omics investigation of aging signatures in the Indian population
News Publication Date: 24-Apr-2026
Web References: https://doi.org/10.18632/aging.206373
Image Credits: Copyright: © 2026 Asthana et al. (Creative Commons Attribution License CC BY 4.0)
Keywords: aging, protocol, multi-omics, population study, biomarker discovery
