Ceramics age, broadly, something like half capacity over... a decade or a few I think, for like X7R or X5R. The crappier ones (Z5U, etc.) of course are worse. I forget if this occurs under bias, by age alone, or both. Capacity can be partially restored by annealing past the Curie temperature.
Kinda-sorta-on-topic plot: Z5U C vs. V plot. Think this was a "203" part (20nF nominal), 8mm disk, random junk bin stock; test amplitude maybe 1V AC, maybe less. Annealing was holding the soldering iron (~350C) on each lead for 20 seconds, enough to get it bubbling hot.

Personally, I can't escape using big films (well, they're more-or-less unlimited life too), electrolytics or the like, because when you're doing more than a few watts like I'm usually doing, you don't have much choice there. It's very difficult to make something more than, "implantable" sized shall we say, that uses only chip and film caps while remaining economical.
Tim