Zoe sequences my microbiome utilizing a know-how known as shotgun metagenomics, which maps DNA. I want Viome’s app and what my husband calls “person expertise.” However I want my outcomes from Zoe. Zoe divides my microbes into “good” and “dangerous”—although I now have Antoine’s voice in my head reminding me it’s simply affiliation. My Blood Sugar Management is “Wonderful.” My Blood Fats Management and Microbiome Biodiversity are “Good.”
I examine the 2 lists of microbes. There’s some overlap, and a few divergence. Possibly my microbiome modified. Possibly the businesses use totally different datasets for identification. Wanting forwards and backwards, it happens to me that there’s no standardized dataset in opposition to which to check outcomes. There’s no common terminology, no consensus about which variables matter and what causes them to differ.
Extra perplexing is what to do subsequent. Viome instructs all shoppers to keep away from sugar, flour, soda, and cured meat. My customized checklist of “keep away from” and “reduce” meals from Viome is brief: cassava, couscous, barley, maple syrup, molasses, white rice, and breadfruit—plus crimson bell peppers as a result of, apparently, my intestine hosts a crimson bell pepper virus I’m obliged to starve out. In any other case, I’m speculated to eat “superfoods”—like cabbage, fennel, and bamboo shoots—and take $199 price of customized formulated precision dietary supplements, prebiotics, probiotics, and oral lozenges, every month. (Every complement pack arrives with my title printed on it, which is oddly flattering.)
Zoe doesn’t promote dietary supplements. Its researchers advise me to keep away from my “intestine suppressors”—which embrace canned soup and cheese-flavored corn puffs—and eat “intestine boosters,” together with avocados, lentils, kale, collards, peas, chickpeas, kidney beans…and bell peppers. Zoe’s lead nutritionist, Federica Amati, tells me that it will present a useful substrate for my good micro organism and ideally starve “the dangerous guys.” Once I overview all of the suggestions facet by facet, they quantity to avoiding processed meals and consuming numerous vegetation. “I simply don’t know that the science is sort of there but for suggestions to be that correct on a person foundation,” is Raj’s evaluation. Suzanne Devkota, director of the Cedars Sinai Human Microbiome Analysis Institute, is even much less ambiguous. “The sequencing a part of most of those checks might be superb, however the suggestions they offer you might be all crap.” She acknowledges the worth in Viome’s information. “However what to do about it? We nonetheless don’t know.”
As a result of they aren’t FDA regulated, at-home microbiome checks can’t diagnose something actually worrisome. Even when there have been an accepted microbial fingerprint for leaky intestine, or despair, or insomnia, neither Viome nor Zoe would have been legally allowed to establish it to me. Devkota, who’s advocated for FDA oversight of at-home microbiome checks, believes the checks have a spot in well being evaluation—she tells me: “I feel everybody ought to have a wholesome baseline, and that features the microbiome. What I like to recommend is to solely use one firm, and purchase just a few of the kits and take a look at your self each six months. And solely examine your information to your self, and completely ignore the place they put you on a plot.” I ask Alessio Fasano, MD, professor of vitamin at Harvard T.H. Chan College of Public Well being and director of the Mucosal Immunology and Biology Analysis Heart at MassGeneral Hospital for Kids (he additionally sits on Viome’s advisory board), how science is aware of that if I observe my suggestions my microbes will transfer in the correct path. “That’s the $30 million query,” he says with amusing. “And to make an extended and complex story quick: It’s undoubtedly a piece in progress.”