Evidence levels · 1 to 5.

Every intervention and claim on this site carries an evidence weight. The one I use is the Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine (OCEBM) hierarchy — 1 at the top, 5 at the bottom. It's what clinicians use to weigh studies against each other.

Peakspan itself sits at Level 5. This site is a single-subject case report. That is the lowest rung of the hierarchy. Nothing I publish here constitutes evidence in the sense that higher-level research does. I use this scale to rate the inputs I rely on (guidelines, trials, mechanistic claims), not to elevate the outputs of this project. The outputs stay Level 5 forever — that's structural, not a target to climb.

1
Systematic reviews of RCTs.
Meta-analyses and Cochrane reviews of randomised controlled trials. Strongest evidence available. Anchors most of my lipid and cardio decisions.
2
Individual RCTs.
Well-designed, adequately powered randomised trials. Most direct support for specific interventions (e.g. Ezetimib on ApoB, zinc-L-carnosine on mucosal healing).
3
Cohort / case-control.
Non-randomised controlled studies with large populations and follow-up. Where I lean when RCTs don't exist (e.g. grip strength as mortality marker).
4
Case series · low-quality cohort.
Observational without controls or with known bias risk. Hypothesis-generating. I cite with explicit caveats.
5
Case report · mechanistic reasoning · expert opinion.
Single subjects and arguments from first principles. No controls, no blinding, no statistical power. This is where Peakspan lives. The data is real, the claims are not.
Peakspan is here

Two things follow from sitting at Level 5:

Cadence · half-yearly, with one annual deep dive.

Too-frequent measurement is noise. Too-infrequent measurement is hope. The compromise I've settled on:

One hard rule: no drop is skipped because the numbers are bad. A missed drop would be the loudest possible signal that the ledger isn't actually open.

Intervention rules.

  1. 01

    Single-variable where possible — and annotated where not.

    The gut protocol in 2025 was a stack. I could not tell you which component drove calprotectin from 434 to 9. That's a confound. I say so. Where I can isolate (e.g. Ezetimib starting alone in 2026), I do.

  2. 02

    Minimum 12 weeks before retest.

    Most clinical biomarkers take a full cell-turnover cycle to reflect a real change. Retesting sooner usually measures noise, which is part of why the public drop cadence is half-yearly, not quarterly. Exception: acute inflammation or symptomatic problems, where I retest earlier and say so.

  3. 03

    Pre-declared target + stop criterion.

    Every intervention gets a specified target (e.g. ApoB ≤70, homocysteine <10) and a stop criterion (no movement after two retests → reassess). No moving goalposts.

  4. 04

    Null results get the same word count as wins.

    If an intervention doesn't move a marker, I write about it with the same detail. Publication bias is the most common way individual data goes wrong.

  5. 05

    Physician in the loop.

    Dr. Alexandru Ardelean (YEARS) is my primary. Prescription-level interventions (e.g. Ezetimib) are his decision, not mine. Lifestyle and OTC supplement changes I own, but I'm not freelancing on pharmacology.

  6. 06

    No new intervention in the month before a YEARS check-up.

    Otherwise I pollute the comparison that's supposed to anchor the drop.

Data sources.

Everything below the dashboard tiles comes from one of these. If a number has no citation next to it, it's from one of these. Raw PDFs available on request: niko@nikohems.de.

Primary clinic · annual

YEARS, Berlin

Dr. Alexandru Ardelean, internal medicine. Full annual check-up: CPET, plethysmography, HRV, body-comp, skin scan, audio, vision, grip, jump, cognitive battery, and full labs via Bioscientia.

Half-yearly labs

Bioscientia MVZ · Berlin + Ingelheim

Standing orders through YEARS. Ingelheim runs the stool / microbiome panels (calprotectin, α1-antitrypsin, SCFAs, diversity). Berlin runs the blood work.

US draws (2024)

Quest Diagnostics

Three draws Oct–Dec 2024 while living in California. LC-MS testosterone, 25-OH vitamin D, hs-CRP, full metabolic. Useful for the trans-continental baseline bridging June 2024 (aware.app) to Feb 2025 (YEARS).

Early baseline

aware.app · MDI Limbach Berlin

June 2024 baseline draw, pre-Berkeley. Useful context for the 2024 → 2026 drift, but a different assay family than Bioscientia; treated carefully in direct comparisons.

Wearable · continuous

Apple Watch · Eight Sleep

Resting HR, HRV (rMSSD), sleep stages, training load. Not clinical-grade, but the trend is honest, and the morning HRV reading drives daily training decisions.

Gym & training log

Hevy · manual

Every session, every set, every RPE, since mid-2025. Provides the lift-side picture the clinic tests can't capture.

What's in the panel — and what isn't.

Tracked half-yearly or annually

Not (yet) tracked

Honest limitations.

A public-facing health experiment carries some built-in biases. The ones I can name: