I will summarize here the role of the Thymus gland and how its health can prolong our days.
- Researchers used artificial intelligence to analyze routine chest CT scans and created a “thymic health score” based on the gland’s size, density, and appearance.
- In the first study (>27,000 people), a healthier thymus was linked to a ~50% lower risk of death from any cause, a 63% lower risk of cardiovascular death, and a 36% lower risk of lung cancer over 12+ years—even after adjusting for age and other factors.
- Healthier thymuses were associated with greater immune cell diversity and lower levels of chronic inflammation.
- The second study (involving>25,000 adults) confirmed the longevity and lung cancer benefits. In >1,200 cancer patients receiving immunotherapy, those with healthier thymuses had a 37% lower risk of cancer progression and 44% lower risk of death, across multiple cancer types (lung, melanoma, breast, kidney).
- Thymic health is not fixed by age alone: it varies widely. Women generally have healthier thymuses than men; higher BMI, smoking, obesity, physical inactivity, chronic stress, and metabolic conditions (e.g., diabetes) accelerate decline.
Bottom Line
The thymus continues to play a meaningful role in adult immune health, longevity, disease prevention, and—crucially—how well people respond to modern cancer immunotherapy.
Lifestyle choices have a bigger impact on thymic function than previously recognized, making preservation of this “forgotten” organ a promising new angle for healthy aging.
While thymic involution (natural shrinking) cannot be fully reversed, the studies and experts emphasize that you can slow its decline through everyday habits.
- Stop smoking—this is the single strongest lifestyle factor linked to faster thymic decline.
- Maintain a healthy weight (aim for BMI in the normal range) through balanced calorie intake and regular physical activity; obesity directly correlates with poorer thymic health.
- Exercise consistently—both aerobic (walking, cycling) and resistance training help lower inflammation and support overall immune function.
- Eat an anti-inflammatory, nutrient-rich diet (Mediterranean-style: plenty of vegetables, fruits, fatty fish, nuts, olive oil; limit ultra-processed foods and added sugars). Nutrients such as zinc, vitamins A, D, and E are especially supportive of immune and thymic tissue.
- Prioritize sleep (7–9 hours) and stress management (meditation, yoga, or therapy)—chronic stress and poor sleep accelerate inflammatory damage to the thymus.
- Manage metabolic health—keep blood sugar, blood pressure, and cholesterol in check; conditions like diabetes are tied to worse thymic scores. Practical next step: If you have a chest CT scan for any reason (lung screening, heart evaluation, etc.), ask your doctor about any notes on thymic appearance—AI-based thymic scoring may become part of routine radiology reports in the coming years.
These steps won’t give you a “super-thymus,” but they are evidence-based, low-risk ways to support immune resilience and align with what the research already shows improves outcomes. Always discuss major changes or supplements with your physician, as individual needs vary and no specific “thymus-boosting” pill or therapy is proven yet.
Sources
- Bernatz S, et al. “Thymic health consequences in adults.” Nature (2026). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-026-10242-y
- Bernatz S, et al. “Thymic health and immunotherapy outcomes in patients with cancer.” Nature (2026). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-026-10243-x
- The Epoch Times article: https://www.theepochtimes.com/health/the-overlooked-organ-that-could-predict-how-long-you-live-6001529
- Mass General Brigham / Harvard Medical School press materials (March 2026)

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