Tokyo University Veterinary Medical Center is a university teaching hospital in Tokyo, Japan that is being tracked for future availability of the canine longevity pill.

Tokyo University Veterinary Medical Center is a university teaching hospital serving Tokyo, Asia, Japan. has been mentioned in coverage as a likely future provider of the canine longevity drug. We are tracking them and will update this page when we have a confirmed status.
We surfaced this provider while scanning veterinary press releases, public clinical-trial registries, and provider-network announcements for any practice that looked likely to participate in canine longevity care.
Even before the pill itself rolls out widely, owners use Tokyo University Veterinary Medical Center for cardiology referrals, research-grade diagnostics, clinical-trial enrollment, all of which contribute to the kind of senior-dog baseline we recommend establishing in advance of any new longevity protocol. If you live in or near Tokyo, Asia, Japan, having a relationship with a practice like this in place — bloodwork on file, a known body-condition score, a current vaccine record — is what keeps the door open the moment a new treatment is offered locally.
When you call Tokyo University Veterinary Medical Center, the most useful questions are simple ones: do they have a waitlist for canine longevity treatment, what does their senior-wellness baseline visit include, and are they participating in any ongoing geroscience or longevity trials. Practices in Japan appreciate owners who arrive prepared, and the answers help us update this page for future readers.
We update this entry whenever the provider's status changes, whenever new coverage is published about their longevity programme, or whenever an owner submits a correction. If you've recently visited Tokyo University Veterinary Medical Center and can confirm what they are or aren't doing today, the contact form at the bottom of this page is the fastest way to keep this entry honest.
- ›internal medicine consults
- ›cardiology referrals
- ›research-grade diagnostics
- ›clinical-trial enrollment
- ›second-opinion appointments
Service list is what we expect for a university teaching hospital of this kind. Confirm specifics with the practice directly.
- 1.Are you participating in any canine longevity drug programs (early-access, trials, or waitlists)?
- 2.What is your typical senior-dog wellness baseline visit — bloodwork, body-condition, cognitive screen?
- 3.If the canine longevity pill is approved in Japan, would my dog need to be an existing patient first?
- 4.Do you keep a notification list for owners interested in new longevity treatments?
- 5.What records would you want me to bring on a first visit?
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What this provider can offer is partly limited by what regulators in Japan have approved. We track every status change.
Read the full Japan brief →Tell us what’s changed: a new program, a closed waitlist, a corrected phone number, an updated status. We update this page as soon as we can verify.