Excellent 4.6 out of 5
Hematological Disorders

Neutropenia

Neutropenia weakens frontline immune defense, increasing infection risk. Biomarker testing clarifies marrow output and immune readiness by measuring circulating neutrophils. At Superpower, we test for Neutrophils and Absolute Neutrophils (absolute neutrophil count, ANC) to detect severity and pattern of neutropenia, guiding interpretation of immune system resilience.

With Superpower, you have access to a comprehensive range of biomarker tests.

Test for Neutropenia
Cancel anytime
HSA/FSA eligible
Results in a week
Physician reviewed

Every result is checked

·
CLIA-certified labs

Federal standard for testing

·
HIPAA compliant

Your data is 100% secure

Key Benefits

  • Show how many infection-fighting neutrophils you have right now.
  • Spot neutropenia early so you can reduce infection risks promptly.
  • Explain frequent fevers, mouth ulcers, or slow-healing infections by confirming low counts.
  • Guide chemotherapy timing, drug dosing, or growth factor support to prevent complications.
  • Protect future fertility by informing chemo adjustments that limit fertility-harming exposure.
  • Support pregnancy care by flagging infection risk and need for closer monitoring.
  • Track counts across weeks to separate temporary dips from chronic neutropenia.
  • Best interpreted with total white count, differential, and your symptoms.

What are Neutropenia

Neutropenia biomarkers are measurements that reveal how robust your front‑line defense against infection is and why it may be impaired. They focus on neutrophils—the most numerous, short‑lived white blood cells that rapidly kill bacteria and fungi—and translate their supply and activity into a clinical picture. The anchor measure is the overall neutrophil number (absolute neutrophil count, ANC), which reflects the available patrol force in the bloodstream. Supporting markers describe where the problem lies: evidence of bone‑marrow output (myelopoiesis), the share of immature neutrophils (bands/immature granulocytes), and clues to accelerated use or loss in tissues. Read together, these data help sort neutropenia into reduced production in the marrow, immune‑mediated destruction (antineutrophil antibodies), or redistribution to vessel walls or spleen (margination, splenic sequestration), and they can flag rare inherited issues with neutrophil development or function. Tracking these biomarkers over time shows infection risk and the pace of recovery, turning the life cycle of a neutrophil—from marrow birth to bloodstream duty to tissue deployment—into actionable insight about innate immunity.

Why are Neutropenia biomarkers important?

Neutropenia biomarkers—neutrophil percentage and absolute neutrophil count—show how ready your innate immune system is to contain bacteria and fungi. They reflect marrow output, stress signaling, and inflammation, affecting defenses across skin, mouth, lungs, gut, and blood.

Neutrophils typically make up about 40–70% of white cells; absolute counts often range 1500–8000. For most, healthiest sits mid‑range. Children vary more, and pregnancy commonly runs higher without disease.

When values fall, the marrow may underproduce (viral illness, medications, nutritional deficits, congenital) or cells are destroyed or sequestered (autoimmune, hypersplenism). With fewer frontline phagocytes, people develop fevers, mouth ulcers, gum swelling, sinus or skin infections, or pneumonia; severe deficits may have few early signs yet progress quickly. In infants and young children, it often shows as recurrent ear, sinus, or skin infections; in pregnancy, true neutropenia is uncommon and warrants careful assessment.

Higher values signal acute bacterial infection, tissue injury, smoking or steroid effect, or systemic inflammation; newborns and pregnancy often show physiologic elevations. Persistent, marked rises can indicate chronic inflammation or, rarely, a myeloid proliferative disorder.

Big picture, these measures link immunity with marrow health, stress hormones, and barrier integrity. Persistent lows raise invasive infection risk; persistent highs track with inflammatory burden. Interpreting them with total white cells, lymphocytes, platelets, and clinical context sharpens both current risk and long‑term outlook.

What Insights Will I Get?

Neutropenia biomarkers reveal how your innate immune “first responder” system is resourced and ready. When neutrophils are low, the body’s ability to contain microbes, repair tissue, and resolve inflammation is strained—driving higher infection risk, energy loss during illness, and stress on metabolic and cardiovascular systems, with downstream effects on cognition and recovery. At Superpower, we test: Neutrophils and Absolute Neutrophils.

Neutrophils are a subtype of white blood cells that rapidly target bacteria and fungi. “Neutrophils” on a report usually refers to the percentage of white cells that are neutrophils. “Absolute Neutrophils” (ANC) is the actual number in circulation. Neutropenia is defined by a low ANC below the laboratory reference range; the percentage alone can be misleading if the total white cell count is high or low.

For stable, healthy function, the ANC needs to be sufficient to patrol mucosal barriers, clear microbes, and support wound healing without exhausting marrow reserves. Low ANC reduces these defenses, raising susceptibility to mouth, skin, sinus, and lung infections; the risk rises as counts fall. A stable ANC within the reference range suggests balanced marrow production and an appropriate stress response. A high or low neutrophil percentage with a normal ANC usually reflects shifts in other white cell types rather than true neutropenia.

Notes: Interpretation varies with age, pregnancy, recent infections, circadian timing, and acute stress. Certain medications and illnesses can suppress counts. People with Duffy-null phenotype (common in some African and Middle Eastern populations) may have benign lower ANC. Reference ranges and methods differ by lab.

Superpower also tests for

See more diseases

Frequently Asked Questions About Neutropenia

What is Neutropenia testing?

It measures how many infection-fighting neutrophils you have, with a focus on whether they are low (neutropenia). It is done on a complete blood count with differential and reports both the percentage of neutrophils and the Absolute Neutrophil Count (ANC). Superpower tests for Neutrophils and Absolute Neutrophils (ANC). Low ANC means reduced innate immune capacity and a higher risk of bacterial and some fungal infections, especially as counts drop further.

Why should I get Neutropenia biomarker testing?

It checks the resilience of your first-line immune defense and your bone marrow’s output. Testing helps explain recurrent infections, mouth ulcers, fevers, or poor wound healing, and it monitors effects of marrow-suppressing medicines (for example, chemotherapy, clozapine, antithyroid drugs) or radiation. It can also uncover neutropenia related to viral illness, autoimmune disease, nutritional deficits (B12, folate, copper), or benign ethnic variants, helping separate transient changes from persistent risk.

How often should I test?

Get a baseline and repeat when your clinical context changes. Many people encounter neutrophil data with routine CBCs. Recheck after significant infections, when starting or changing medicines that affect marrow, or if prior results were low to confirm persistence and trend. Those undergoing cytotoxic therapy or known to have neutropenia typically need closer, scheduled monitoring; frequency is driven by clinical protocols and how low the ANC runs over time.

What can affect biomarker levels?

Acute bacterial stress and corticosteroids can raise neutrophils; viral infections often lower them. Marrow-suppressing drugs (chemotherapy, clozapine, antithyroid agents, some antibiotics/anticonvulsants), radiation, autoimmune disease, hypersplenism, and deficiencies of B12, folate, or copper can reduce counts. Smoking and intense exercise can transiently increase counts; severe alcohol use and malnutrition can decrease them. Time of day, pregnancy, and genetics matter too; benign ethnic neutropenia is common in Duffy-null populations.

Are there any preparations needed before Neutropenia biomarker testing?

No special prep or fasting is required. It’s a standard venous blood draw as part of a CBC with differential. For more consistent comparisons over time, aim to test under similar conditions—well hydrated, at a similar time of day, and without unusually intense exercise or acute stress just beforehand. Recent infections, pregnancy, and medications can shift values, so interpret results in that context.

Can lifestyle changes affect my biomarker levels?

Only modestly, and usually transiently. Smoking, acute stress, and vigorous exercise can raise neutrophils; heavy alcohol use and poor nutrition can lower them by affecting marrow function. Sleep deprivation and circadian shifts can nudge counts. However, the major drivers of neutropenia are illnesses, medications, radiation, autoimmune processes, genetic variants, and nutrient deficiencies. Lifestyle alone rarely normalizes a true low ANC without addressing the underlying cause.

How do I interpret my results?

Focus on the Absolute Neutrophil Count (ANC). It’s calculated from total white cells and the neutrophil percentage. Typical categories: mild neutropenia (ANC 1000–1499/µL), moderate (500–999/µL), severe (<500/µL), with infection risk rising as ANC falls. Transient dips are common after viral illnesses; persistent lows suggest marrow suppression, autoimmune causes, nutrient deficits, or benign ethnic neutropenia. Trends across repeat tests, symptoms, and medications determine significance. Superpower reports both Neutrophils and ANC.

How do I interpret my results?

Focus on the Absolute Neutrophil Count (ANC). It’s calculated from total white cells and the neutrophil percentage. Typical categories: mild neutropenia (ANC 1000–1499/µL), moderate (500–999/µL), severe (<500/µL), with infection risk rising as ANC falls. Transient dips are common after viral illnesses; persistent lows suggest marrow suppression, autoimmune causes, nutrient deficits, or benign ethnic neutropenia. Trends across repeat tests, symptoms, and medications determine significance. Superpower reports both Neutrophils and ANC.

How it works

1

Test your whole body

Get a comprehensive blood draw at one of our 3,000+ partner labs or from the comfort of your own home.

2

An Actionable Plan

Easy to understand results & a clear action plan with tailored recommendations on diet, lifestyle changes, supplements and pharmaceuticals.

3

A Connected Ecosystem

You can book additional diagnostics, buy curated supplements for 20% off & pharmaceuticals within your Superpower dashboard.

Superpower tests more than 
100+ biomarkers & common symptoms

Developed by world-class medical professionals

Supported by the world’s top longevity clinicians and MDs.

Dr Anant Vinjamoori

Superpower Chief Longevity Officer, Harvard MD & MBA

A smiling woman wearing a white coat and stethoscope poses for a portrait.

Dr Leigh Erin Connealy

Clinician & Founder of The Centre for New Medicine

Man in a black medical scrub top smiling at the camera.

Dr Abe Malkin

Founder & Medical Director of Concierge MD

Dr Robert Lufkin

UCLA Medical Professor, NYT Bestselling Author

membership

$17

/month
Billed annually at $199
A smartphone displays health app results, showing biomarker summary, superpower score, and biological age details.
A website displays a list of most ordered products including a ring, vitamin spray, and oil.
A smartphone displays health app results, showing biomarker summary, superpower score, and biological age details.A tablet screen shows a shopping website with three most ordered products: a ring, supplement, and skincare oil.
What could cost you $15,000 is $199

Superpower
Membership

Your membership includes one comprehensive blood draw each year, covering 100+ biomarkers in a single collection
One appointment, one draw for your annual panel.
100+ labs tested per year
A personalized plan that evolves with you
Get your biological age and track your health over a lifetime
$
17
/month
billed annually
Flexible payment options
Four credit card logos: HSA/FSA Eligible, American Express, Visa, and Mastercard.
Start testing
Cancel anytime
HSA/FSA eligible
Results in a week
Pricing may vary for members in New York and New Jersey **

Finally, healthcare that looks at the whole you