Limitless Research · Longevity · NAD+ · Route Comparison

IV NAD+ vs oral NR — what the 2026 data shows.

The Frontiers 2026 retrospective tolerability pilot, the npj Aging crossover RCT on a systems NAD+ supplement, and the May 11 NPR skepticism story — read together, by a physician who prescribes both routes. Why Limitless leads with the IV load, and what would change that.
Joshua Hare, DO · 2026-05-26 · 8 min read

Why this article exists

NAD+ has become one of those terms — like collagen, like leaky gut, like adrenal fatigue — where the public conversation has outrun the clinical evidence in a way that makes a careful physician slightly uncomfortable. National outlets ran skeptical pieces this spring, including the May 11 NPR story on whether NAD+ infusions and supplements actually move the longevity needle. The honest answer, then and now, is that the route matters and the data tiers are genuinely uneven.

This article is the route-by-route read. It covers what the precursor RCTs — primarily nicotinamide riboside (NR) and nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN) — actually show on durable endpoints. It covers what the IV route does pharmacokinetically, where the controlled data are missing, and why the IV loading protocol still earns its place in the Limitless menu. And it covers what a physician should actually tell a prospective patient who has read the NPR piece — without abandoning the protocol or pretending the criticism is illegitimate.

The most useful sentence a physician can say about NAD+ in 2026 is also the least marketable one: "The mechanism is solid, the precursor RCT data is moderate and growing, the IV pharmacokinetics is real but under-trialed, and the longevity-endpoint human trials do not yet exist." We say it on every page.

What the precursor RCTs actually show

The oral NR and NMN trial base has been the more substantively studied side of the NAD+ space. By 2026, the picture across the precursor literature is consistent enough to summarize cleanly. NR and NMN reliably raise whole-blood NAD+ levels. They are tolerated at the doses studied. The downstream clinical effects are smaller and more variable than the marketing implies — modest improvements in muscle insulin sensitivity in postmenopausal women on NMN, a small blood-pressure reduction in older adults on NR, modest improvements in fatigue, and signal-generating but not definitive work in muscle strength.

The newest entry in this picture is a double-blind, randomized, crossover trial published in npj Aging on a multi-ingredient "systems" NAD+ supplement. The trial reported a clear increase in whole-blood NAD+, a rise in SIRT1, a reduction in pro-inflammatory cytokines, and a shift in IgG glycosylation patterns toward a younger biological age signature. That is the most useful piece of new precursor data in some time — and we cite it explicitly because it is exactly the kind of mechanistically coherent, biomarker-anchored RCT result that the NAD+ space has been short of.

What none of these precursor trials have produced is a hard-endpoint demonstration of slowed aging, reduced mortality, reduced incident dementia, or any of the longevity claims that vendor pages routinely imply. The 2026 PRISMA systematic review of more than 100 NAD+ studies says exactly that: biological activity is clear, anti-aging clinical effectiveness remains inconclusive. The 2025 Nature Aging expert review — written by 25 senior investigators in the field — said the same thing in calmer language.

What the IV route is and is not

The IV NAD+ route does not have the precursor RCT base behind it. There is no large randomized trial of IV NAD+ infusion in healthy adults with a hard-endpoint outcome, and very limited published controlled data on IV NAD+ in any setting. That is the legitimate part of the skepticism. We acknowledge it on the main NAD+ evidence page and we repeat it here.

What the IV route does have is unambiguous pharmacokinetics. IV NAD+ raises serum NAD+ rapidly and to levels not achievable with oral precursor dosing. The published Frontiers retrospective pilot of IV NAD+ versus NR tolerability, published in 2026, is the first controlled comparison aimed directly at our question — and its main finding is that the IV route delivers reliable rises with a flushing/tolerability signature that is well-managed by drip-rate control. The pilot is not a longevity-endpoint trial. It is, however, an honest tolerability benchmark in the kind of patients who actually receive IV NAD+ in practice, and the only piece of comparative data of its kind in 2026.

So the route comparison is asymmetric in a specific way. The precursors have moderate RCT evidence for biomarker movement and small clinical effects. The IV route has unambiguous pharmacokinetic data, a published tolerability comparison, and a real absence of large hard-endpoint trials. Neither route has earned a longevity claim. Both routes do things to a patient's NAD+ metabolism that are worth doing inside an evidence-honest framework.

Why the Limitless protocol leads with the IV load

The standing Limitless NAD+ protocol is unchanged by the 2026 data: a 5 × 750 mg IV loading series over the first two weeks, followed by 100–200 mg SubQ maintenance daily or every other day. The reasoning is not that IV is better than oral. The reasoning is that the IV load is the route most likely to produce a discriminating clinical signal in the patient's own experience — energy, sleep depth, recovery — within the window of a loading series, and the SubQ maintenance step is the bridge from that loading signal to a sustained intake that does not require infusion logistics.

For a patient whose preference is oral, or whose situation makes infusion impractical, the Limitless posture is to substitute oral NR or NMN, frame the evidence honestly, and skip the IV step. The protocol is a sequence; the molecule is the same NAD+ biology either way; the route is selected with the patient, not for them. See the IV experience guide for what the loading series actually feels like and how the flush and drip rate are managed.

What the NPR piece got right — and what it didn't

The May 11 NPR piece quoted serious researchers, and the central point is correct: NAD+ marketing has outrun the clinical evidence. It is right to highlight that. It is also a narrower point than the headline suggests. What the piece did not do — because it was a 1,200-word general-audience article rather than a clinical review — is distinguish the mechanism (settled), the precursor RCT base (moderate and growing), and the IV pharmacokinetic data (real, under-trialed) from each other. Lumping all three together produces a story that reads as "this whole space is hype." That is the unfair part.

The fair reading is the one this site has used since the original NAD+ evidence brief. There is a real biology here. The precursor RCTs say modest things, modestly, on plausible biomarker endpoints. The IV pharmacokinetic data is what it is. None of it justifies a "fountain of youth" claim. All of it justifies a careful, monitored, transparently-framed protocol in patients who understand what the evidence does and does not say.

The evidence, by route

RouteEvidence tierPosition at Limitless
Oral NR / NMN precursorsMultiple RCTs; biomarker movement clear; modest clinical effects; npj Aging 2026 crossover adds SIRT1 + glycosylation signalSubstitute for IV when the patient prefers oral or infusion is impractical. Disclosed clearly.
IV NAD+ infusionUnambiguous PK; Frontiers 2026 retrospective tolerability pilot; no large hard-endpoint RCTLimitless loading-series lead — 5 × 750 mg over two weeks, drip-rate-managed.
SubQ NAD+ maintenancePharmacokinetic data; clinical literature smaller than IVBridge from the IV loading series — 100–200 mg daily/EOD, unchanged by the 2026 data.
Anti-aging / longevity-endpoint claim (any route)No hard-endpoint human RCT exists in 2026Not claimed. Said out loud on every page.

How the 2026 data changes prescribing — it doesn't

Standing posture · 2026-05-26

The route is chosen with the patient, the framing is unchanged.

The Limitless NAD+ protocol remains: 5 × 750 mg IV loading series over the first two weeks, then 100–200 mg SubQ maintenance daily or every other day. For patients who prefer oral, NR or NMN is substituted at evidence-appropriate doses and the IV step is skipped. The protocol is not changing because of the Frontiers tolerability pilot or the npj Aging crossover RCT; if anything, both add evidence-aligned reasons to keep doing what we already do.

The framing is unchanged. Mechanism solid, precursor RCT data moderate and growing, IV pharmacokinetics real and under-trialed, longevity-endpoint claim not made. We will repeat that any time a patient mentions a news cycle, a vendor page, or a podcast.

Foundations first, always. NAD+ is one input into a larger longevity protocol that begins with sleep, training, nutrition, and indicated hormone optimization — not a replacement for any of them.

What we tell every NAD+ patient

What updates this article

This article will update when a hard-endpoint randomized trial of IV NAD+ in adults is published, when the precursor (NR/NMN) trial base extends into mortality or incident-disease endpoints, when the Frontiers tolerability pilot is extended into a larger comparison, and whenever the NAD+ regulatory or evidence picture shifts materially. The standing posture in the box above governs every Limitless NAD+ prescription as of 2026-05-26.

Primary sources

  1. Frontiers, 2026. Retrospective tolerability comparison of intravenous NAD+ infusion vs nicotinamide riboside supplementation. frontiersin.org/journals/aging
  2. npj Aging, 2026. Double-blind, randomized, crossover trial of a systems NAD+ supplement — increases in whole-blood NAD+ and SIRT1, decreases in pro-inflammatory cytokines, shift in IgG glycosylation. nature.com/npjamd
  3. 2026 PRISMA systematic review of NAD+ studies — biological activity clear, anti-aging clinical effectiveness inconclusive.
  4. Nature Aging, 2025. Expert review of NAD+ in aging — written by 25 senior investigators. nature.com/nataging
  5. NPR, 2026-05-11. "Marketers say NAD+ pills and infusions can boost longevity. What's the evidence?" npr.org
  6. ScienceDaily, 2026-03-24. Coverage of NAD+ neurodegenerative-disease signal work. sciencedaily.com
  7. Limitless NAD+ clinical evidence brief, 2026. /research/nad-plus-clinical-evidence-2026.html
  8. Limitless NAD+ IV experience guide. /nad-iv-what-to-expect.html
Written by Joshua Hare, DO — founding physician, Limitless Performance Medicine. This page reflects the evidence as of 2026-05-26 and will be updated when a hard-endpoint IV NAD+ randomized trial is published or the precursor trial base extends into incident-disease endpoints. Read the companion NAD+ clinical evidence brief for the broader posture.
← Back to Research