The most important biomarker isn't always the one highlighted in red. We asked Healf Zone practitioners which blood test results they focus on first and why.

Written by: Samantha Nice
Written on: July 13, 2026
Most people spend very little time looking at their blood test results. They quickly scan for anything highlighted in red, check their cholesterol, glance at vitamin D levels, focusing only on the line items that seem to be lacking or higher than average.
Practitioners tend to see something completely different in those numbers. Rather than focusing on individual numbers, they're looking for patterns across multiple biomarkers and the clues those patterns can provide. The most useful insight isn't always hiding in the result that jumps off the page. That's why two people can receive results that look similar and come away with very different insights.
We asked Healf Zone practitioners Tibby King-Smith DipNT (CNM) and Lucie Marchelot Shukla which biomarkers they review first, which results people often misunderstand, and what they believe deserves more focus.
A lab report can contain dozens of biomarkers. Some relate to cardiovascular health, while others look at blood sugar regulation, inflammation, nutrient status, thyroid function, or hormone levels. The challenge is that most biomarkers don't tell you very much on their own. Not every biomarker carries the same weight. Some can provide important clues about how different systems in the body are functioning, while others are surprisingly easy to misinterpret without a deeper understanding of what influences them.
"I review biomarkers in relation to one another rather than in isolation," says Shukla. A slightly elevated marker can get the majority of our attention at first, while a result sitting comfortably within the laboratory reference range may become far more interesting and important when viewed alongside other biomarkers. It's often the relationships between markers, rather than the individual numbers themselves, that reveal the most about our wellbeing.
This is where many people get stuck: They focus on individual results rather than the patterns practitioners are trained to spot. Healf Zone bridges that gap, combining results from Healf Bloods with practitioner interpretation to help bring biomarker data to life.
One of the biggest misconceptions around blood testing is that normal and optimal essentially mean the same thing. "A 'normal' result simply means it falls within the laboratory reference range, which is based on the wider population, and includes many people who may not be at optimal wellbeing," says King-Smith. "An 'optimal' result looks beyond whether a value is technically normal and considers where it sits within the range alongside the latest research, clinical experience, and the individual's goals and symptoms."
Shukla takes a similar view and adds that, "a biomarker can sit comfortably within the reference range but still not be optimal for that individual." For practitioners, some of the most useful observations come from looking beyond whether a biomarker is classed as “normal” or “abnormal,” and considering where it sits within the range itself.
Every practitioner has their own approach, but several biomarkers consistently appeared at the top of both King-Smith and Shukla’s lists. These markers can offer an early read on some of the body's most important systems, from blood sugar regulation and inflammation to cardiovascular and thyroid function.
If practitioners want to understand how the body has been handling blood sugar over the past few months, they often start with HbA1c. Unlike a single glucose reading, which captures one moment in time, HbA1c reflects average blood sugar levels over roughly three months. That makes it one of the most useful biomarkers for understanding longer-term blood sugar regulation.
For King-Smith, it's often one of the first biomarkers she reviews. "HbA1c provides insight into long-term metabolic function and can often help explain changes we're seeing elsewhere in the results,” she says.
Blood sugar regulation influences far more than energy levels. It's closely linked to metabolic and cardiovascular health, and is frequently discussed in longevity research, making HbA1c one of the most informative biomarkers in a standard blood panel.
While HbA1c reflects longer-term changes in blood sugar regulation, CRP offers a snapshot of inflammatory activity at a particular moment in time. Produced by the liver, it tends to rise when inflammation increases elsewhere in the body. While it can’t tell you what's driving that inflammation, it can indicate that something is placing stress on the system.
Both practitioners pointed to CRP as a biomarker that deserves more airtime. "CRP is one that is often overlooked," says Shukla. "Even when it falls within the laboratory reference range, a result towards the higher end of what is considered normal can still provide useful information when considered alongside other biomarkers, symptoms and recent health history. Temporary factors, including a recent infection, can also influence CRP levels."
CRP doesn't provide all the answers but it can flag that something may be driving inflammatory activity in the body, making it a good starting point for piecing results together.
The thyroid helps set the pace for many of the body's day-to-day functions. Its hormones influence how efficiently cells produce and use energy, how quickly the body burns calories and how temperature is regulated. Changes in thyroid function can show up in unexpected ways, from low energy and feeling unusually cold to shifts in weight and exercise recovery.
Rather than focusing on a single result, practitioners look across the full thyroid panel. This helps them understand not just how much thyroid hormone is being produced, but how effectively it's being converted and used throughout the body.
Total cholesterol is usually the number people remember, but practitioners are often more interested in the wider lipid profile and how different cholesterol markers relate to one another.
ApoB has attracted growing attention in recent years. It measures the number of cholesterol-carrying particles moving through the bloodstream, which is why many researchers consider it an informative cardiovascular biomarker.
King-Smith regularly reviews ApoB alongside other lipid markers, including ApoA, LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol and triglycerides. Looking at these markers together can provide a more detailed view of cardiovascular health than total cholesterol alone.
Vitamin D is one of the most tested nutrient biomarkers, yet low levels remain surprisingly common. Despite its popularity as a supplement, vitamin D is still one of the biomarkers practitioners frequently see sitting below ideal levels. While it's best known for its connection to bone health, practitioners are also interested in its relationship with immune and muscle function.
Zinc and copper are a good reminder that nutrients don't work in isolation. Both are involved in a huge range of biological processes, and the relationship between them can be just as informative as the individual results.
Shukla frequently notices imbalances between the two. That's partly due to the way these minerals interact. High levels of one can influence the other, which is why our Healf Zone experts review them side by side. Looking at the balance between zinc and copper can give a more nuanced view of nutrient status than either marker alone.
There isn't a single biomarker that can tell you how well you're ageing. Despite the endless search for a longevity score, practitioners take a much broader view. As King-Smith puts it, "everyone's profile is unique." Rather than focusing on a single standout result, they're more interested in the systems most closely linked to long-term wellbeing. Several biomarkers appear repeatedly throughout longevity research, including:
What links these biomarkers is that they reflect systems consistently associated with long-term wellbeing, including cardiovascular function, metabolic health, inflammation and body composition.
Some biomarkers have become shorthand for much bigger ideas. Creatinine is often assumed to reflect just kidney function, while cholesterol gets reduced to a single number and hormone results are interpreted without considering where someone is in their cycle. According to our Healf Zone team, these are three areas where laboratory results can be easy to misread.
Creatinine is one of the most common causes of unnecessary concern. A result sitting above the lab reference range can immediately raise questions about kidney function. Yet creatinine is also influenced by muscle mass and creatine supplementation, which means a higher result isn't always unexpected.
"Elevated creatinine doesn't automatically indicate poor kidney function, particularly in people who supplement with creatine or have a higher muscle mass," says King-Smith. This is why our practitioners review creatinine alongside eGFR and other kidney function markers before forming an interpretation.
Hormone biomarkers can change dramatically across the menstrual cycle. A result captured on day one may look completely different during another, which makes timing a crucial part of interpretation.
"Hormone levels naturally fluctuate throughout the menstrual cycle, so a blood test is only a snapshot of that particular moment," says King-Smith. Without knowing where someone is in their cycle, a hormone result can be difficult to interpret accurately.
Cholesterol may be the most familiar biomarker in blood testing, which is partly why it's so easy to oversimplify. "Cholesterol markers are probably some of the results we spend the most time discussing with members," says King-Smith.
Total cholesterol doesn't tell you how many lipoprotein particles are circulating, how those particles are distributed or how they relate to the rest of the lipid profile. That's why practitioners often look beyond total cholesterol and review markers such as LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides and ApoB.
Supplement routines have a habit of expanding over time. A magnesium supplement gets added for sleep. Vitamin D follows in winter. A few months later, the original reason for taking them has become a little hazy, yet the routine remains.
"Healf Bloods helps turn guesswork into informed decisions," says Shukla. "It can show whether your current nutrition and supplement routine is delivering the intended outcome, highlight areas that may benefit from further focus and identify supplements that may no longer be necessary."
Shukla also points to a common assumption around supplementation. If a nutrient is beneficial, taking more should lead to a better outcome. Yet vitamins and minerals interact with one another, and increasing one can sometimes influence the balance of another.
Blood testing can help reveal whether a supplement routine is showing up in the biomarkers you'd expect to see change. Sometimes the results line up perfectly. Sometimes they point in a completely different direction.
“One of the most valuable things a blood test offers is a clearer understanding of your personal baseline,” says King-Smith. Understanding what's typical for you creates a reference point for future results. Even when biomarkers remain within recommended ranges, changes over time can offer valuable insight into what's shifting beneath the surface.
That's why practitioners often place more value on trends than individual results. A biomarker moving steadily in one direction can sometimes reveal more than a single snapshot.
For many, that's where the true value of blood testing lies. Not in chasing a perfect number or obsessing over a result that's slightly outside a range. It's about building a deeper understanding of your biology and making more informed decisions about how you eat, train, recover and live.
Healf Bloods measures more than 35 biomarkers through a single at-home blood test, with results typically available on your online dashboard within 72 hours or less. Within Healf Zone, those results can be viewed alongside wearable data, wellbeing priorities and practitioner interpretation, helping bring your wellbeing data to life.
This article is for informational purposes only, even if and regardless of whether it features the advice of physicians and medical practitioners. This article is not, nor is it intended to be, a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment and should never be relied upon for specific medical advice. The views expressed in this article are the views of the expert and do not necessarily represent the views of Healf
Samantha Nice is a seasoned wellness writer with over a decade of experience crafting content for a diverse range of global brands. A passionate advocate for holistic wellbeing, she brings a particular focus to supplements, women’s health, strength training, and running. Samantha is a proud member of the Healf editorial team, where she merges her love for storytelling with industry insights and science-backed evidence.
An avid WHOOP wearer, keen runner (with a sub 1:30 half marathon) hot yoga enthusiast and regular gym goer, Samantha lives and breathes the wellness lifestyle she writes about. With a solid black book of trusted contacts (including some of the industry’s leading experts) she’s committed to creating accessible, well-informed content that empowers and inspires Healf readers.