The basic question to ask is: did he live to 110 because of the drug, or was he going to be unusually long-lived anyway and happened to be enrolled in the trial?
If the drug was developed to combat some mechanism of senescence, one might reasonably entertain the possibility of a causal effect, but if it was for an unrelated matter, I don't see a reason to expect it. Either way, one would want the scientists to do a lot more tests on that individual to discover the mechanisms of his longevity.
("Personally, young man, I attribute my years to a diet of whisky, cigars, and strictly fried food.")
That is one basic question to ask. The fact that it was not developed to combat a mechanism of senescence does not mean that it fails to inadverdently combat a mechanism of senescence. I agree that more study of the individual is in order. However, personally I'd probably still try the stuff in the interim- I wouldn't want to lose years waiting on papers to be published, and i feel that the chance is worth it.
The previous sentence is really the point of the prompt- what level of evidence do you need to strike out on your own, against the frequentist stats saying it doesn't happen for most people? What amount of upside?
Imagine reading about the following result buried in a prestigious journal:
Now, personally, reading this I would be completely uninterested in the normal result and fascinated by the one, crazy, outlier. Living to the age of 110 is abnormal enough that within 6,666 people selected as a statistical representation of the population, it is extremely unlikely that anyone would live that long, much less continue performing at the apparent health of an 80 year old.
How small would the sample size have to be before you would consider trying the drug yourself, just to see if you, too, lived forever as long as you took it? What adverse effects and hassles would you go through to try it? Would these factors interact to influence your decision (Mild headaches and a pill 4x/day in exchange for maybe apparent eternal life? Sign me up!)
This example is an oversimplification to make a point- often in clinical trials there are odd outliers in the results. Patients who went into full remission, or had a full recovery, or were cured of schizophrenia completely.
In the example above, if the sample size had been 10 people, 9 of whom had no adverse effects and one who lived forever, I would take it. I have been known to try nootropics with little or no proven effect, because there are outliers in their samples who have claimed tremendously helpful effects and few people with adverse effects, and i want to see if I get lucky. I think that if even the right placebo could cause changes which improve my effectiveness, it would be worth a shot.
As far as I know, psychiatrists cannot reliably predict that a given drug will improve a patient's long-term diagnosis, and psychiatrists/psychologists cannot even reliably agree on what condition a patient is manifesting. Mental disorders appear to resist diagnosis and solution, unlike, say, a broken leg or a sucking chest wound. I have learned that Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) has consistent results against a number of disorders, so I have endeavored to learn and apply CBT to my own life without a psychologist or psychiatrist. It has proven extremely effective and worthwhile.
Here is the topic for discussion: should we trust psychiatric analysis using frequentist statistics and ignore the outliers, or should we individually analyze psychiatric studies to see if they contain outliers who show symptoms which we personally desire? Should we act differently when seeking nootropics to improve performance than we do when seeking medication for crippling OCD? Should we trust our psychiatrists, who are probably not very statistically savvy and probably don't read the cases of the outliers?
Where are the holes in my logic, which suggests that psychiatrists who think like medical doctors/general practitioners have a completely incorrect perspective (the law of averages) for finding and testing potential solutions for the extremely personalized medicinal field of psychotherapy/psychiatry (in which everyone is, actually, an extremely unique snowflake.).
This is more of a thought-provoking prompt than a well-researched post, so please excuse any apparent assertions in the above, all of which is provided for the sake of argument and arises from anecdata.