Gut Microbiome Tests Promise Full-Body Optimization—Should You Try One?

Photograph: Getty Images; Collage: Gabe Conte

In nearly any conversation about the U.S. healthcare system, you’ll sense a growing frustration about things like long wait times for appointments, sky-high prescription drug costs, and a lack of focus on preventative care. It’s easy to feel a bit disillusioned—to want to find relief for those nagging symptoms without having a provider tell you that all of your tests came back normal.

This is especially true for hard-to-diagnose issues like gastrointestinal problems. Many people eager for solutions have turned to at-home solutions like gut microbiome tests. Running from $120 to upwards of $350, these kits often use a self-collected stool sample and/or DNA sequencing to provide a detailed analysis of what microbial species are in your gut. Some offer personalized plans based on your results, while others offer diagnostic tools like a gut inflammation analysis to see if you could have irritable bowel syndrome or IBS.

“In the last few years, there has really been an explosion of interest in the microbiome,” says Adam Perlman, MD, former medical director of Mayo Clinic and the chief medical officer of Pendulum Therapeutics, a probiotics company. However, a consideration is that the medical world still understands how the microbiome functions. “It’s like the new frontier of medicine,” he says. “It’s still an area that needs more science, and many conventional physicians still don't feel very comfortable with it.”

The medical world is certain about one thing though: The microbiome is essential for overall health. It is “very involved in things like brain health, cardiovascular health, endocrine health, and on and on,” says Maya Feller, a registered dietician who works in nutrition education and counseling. Dr. Perlman says it also communicates with our immune system, affects processes like digestion, and can potentially influence our mental health. These links are due to the trillions of microbial inhabitants that call our gut home—everything from good bugs to bad bugs to dead bugs, says Feller—including bacteria, viruses, and other organisms. “We want an abundance of good bugs because that’s what actually helps to have these outward conversations with various parts of the body,” she says.

But the issue is that scientists don’t really know what a “healthy” microbiome looks like. Even people with good gut health have vastly different microbiomes, so while we might know that a certain microbe is generally “good,” it’s hard to pinpoint how it will interact within an individual’s system. That makes any actionable advice quite difficult, even if the data that these tests provide is accurate.

Another problem is that microbiome tests capture a snapshot of what your gut looks like at that given moment. According to Perlman, many factors, like our diet, environment, genetics, and even circadian rhythm, can affect what microbes we host. “What's happening in the gut is heavily influenced by what you eat,” says Feller. “So if you're eating outside of your normal and you take a test like this, the results may or may not be meaningful, right?” And your microbiome can change within a matter of days, says Perlman, and even quicker if you’ve taken antibiotics, which can cause dramatic changes nearly overnight.

So, clinical practitioners don’t yet rely on these tests in medical settings, and the consensus among both Feller and Dr. Perlman is that the science has too many holes for them to be beneficial for most people at this time. However, the outlook for using the gut microbiome as part of an individualized health strategy is promising—eventually: “As our understanding of how we can intervene in meaningful ways and get meaningful outcomes for our patients, I do think these tests will become more commonplace,” says Dr. Perlman. However, according to a 2022 review in Nature, we are likely to see it as an integral part of clinical care sometime within the next decade due to challenges like understanding the underlying mechanisms and standardizing approaches to testing and reporting.

If you want to improve your gut health, you’re not at a loss; the first step is to prioritize your diet, says Dr. Perlman. “It's really about giving the microbiome and the gut the things that it wants, which is typically healthier foods—certainly fiber—and avoiding or minimizing things like large amounts of sugar or foods high in saturated fats,” he says. To do this, Feller suggests you think about what you're drinking because beverages are often loaded with extra sugars. Then, consider what plants you can tolerate and how you can add more of those into daily eating. To ensure this change is sustainable, “think about foods from the lens of ‘is it tasty to me,’ ‘is it culturally relevant’ and ‘is it accessible and affordable?’” Feller says. You could also consider supplementing with probiotics, which can prevent gut inflammation and restore the composition of the microbiome.

But to find long-term relief, you may want to seek out a specialist, like a dietician or gastroenterologist, who has more specialized knowledge of the gut than a primary care doctor. Really, “anytime you have a symptom, you should discuss it with your health care provider first,” says Dr. Perlman. “That's really the first step to alleviating symptoms.”

Originally Appeared on GQ