Risk Stratification
How I use this information
This is not about labeling risk – it’s about guiding decisions.
Where do I need to focus first?
What needs closer monitoring?
What can I deprioritize for now?
Risk stratification helped me move from general concern to targeted action.
How To Use This Tool As A Guide
This is not a diagnostic tool or a prediction of outcome. It’s simply a way to organize how risk shows up across key areas. Score each domain based on your current picture, using the slider in the manner you would rate something on a scale of 1 to 10. (1 being far left – 10 being far right). Then use the result to identify where your attention may be most useful. The goal is not the number – it’s the direction and clarity where focus belongs.
Move each slider to reflect your best estimation of current situation.
A lower number means that area is relatively stable.
A higher number means it may be contributing more to your overall risk.
There is no perfect score. This isn’t about being precise — it’s about stepping back and seeing where things may be more or less weighted.
Once you’ve set all the sliders, look at where the highest values are. That’s where I would start focusing first.
I use this as a way to organize my thinking and prioritize – not to diagnose or predict.
Risk Weighting Framework
A directional tool to organize how risk appears across key domains. This is not a diagnostic score. It is a way to think about priorities, patterns, and where attention may be most useful.
Score the domains
Genetics
APOE status, Lp(a), MTHFR, DIO-related variants, and inherited risk patterns.
Lipids
ApoB, LDL-P, triglycerides, HDL, sterol patterns, and cardiovascular load.
Glucose & metabolic
Fasting glucose, insulin, post-meal control, metabolic flexibility, and trends.
Inflammation
hs-CRP, homocysteine, immune burden, oral health, infections, and inflammatory tone.
Lifestyle & function
Sleep, exercise, stress regulation, body composition, recovery, and daily structure.
What May Influence These Scores
Risk rarely comes from one thing alone. Genetics, biomarkers, lifestyle, hormones, sleep, inflammation, and environmental exposures often interact in ways that shape overall resilience and vulnerability.
These categories are intentionally broad. The goal is not to calculate a precise medical score, but to help organize where patterns may deserve more attention.
Examples of factors that may influence each domain:
Genetics
- APOE status
- Lp(a)
- MTHFR
- PEMT
- DIO-related thyroid variants
- family history patterns
Lipids
- ApoB
- LDL-P
- triglycerides
- HDL
- sterol absorption patterns
- oxidized lipid burden
Glucose & Metabolic
- fasting glucose
- fasting insulin
- A1C
- post-meal glucose spikes
- CGM variability
- metabolic flexibility
- body composition trends
Inflammation
- hs-CRP
- homocysteine
- chronic infections
- oral health
- autoimmune activity
- sleep disruption
- visceral adiposity
Lifestyle & Function
- sleep quality
- resistance training
- aerobic fitness
- stress regulation
- recovery capacity
- cognitive engagement
- social connection
Hormonal & Thyroid Context
- Free T3
- reverse T3
- thyroid antibodies
- estradiol
- progesterone
- testosterone
- vitamin D status
These may not fit neatly into a single category, but can significantly influence energy, metabolism, inflammation, cognition, and overall resilience:
Protective Factors & Supportive Strategies
Risk is only one side of the picture. I also believe it’s important to consider the protective factors and supportive strategies that may improve resilience over time.
Some people may already be incorporating approaches such as:
- resistance training
- aerobic exercise
- sauna
- PEMF
- sleep optimization
- stress reduction practices
- metabolic therapies
- cognitive training
- social engagement
- nutritional interventions
- CGM tracking
- HBOT
- targeted supplementation
These are not cures or guarantees. They are simply examples of tools some people may choose to explore as part of a broader prevention or optimization strategy.
The goal is not perfection. It’s identifying where effort may have the greatest long-term benefit.
My Approach
This is where everything became more personal. APOE4 came as a total surprise to me – and, it was only one piece of the puzzle – I needed to understand how it showed up. That meant looking beyond isolated lab values and focusing on patterns, trends, and context.
Over time, I began to connect genetics, family history, and biomarkers into a more complete picture. Some risks were obvious, others were more subtle, but together they helped shape where I chose to focus my attention.
I also found it helpful to focus on what was actionable, rather than trying to interpret everything at once. Not every marker carries the same weight, and not every risk component needs to be addressed immediately.
This reflects how I think about risk – not as something fixed, but as something that can be better understood and, in many cases, influenced over time.
This reflects my personal approach as an APOE4/4 carrier. I share what I’m doing, tracking, and learning – not medical advice. What I found immensely helpful was uploading my raw data to www.foundmyfitness.com to obtain an extensive report highlighting ALL known gene variants I carry (both risk and protective genes).
What stood out in my profile
These were some of the factors that most influenced how I think about my risk:
- Carrying two copies of APOE4
- Elevated Lp(a), which shifted my focus toward cardiovascular risk
- MTHFR and DIO-related variants that added nuance to methylation and thyroid function
I didn’t view these in isolation, but as part of a broader pattern that helped guide where I chose to focus first.
The Components of Risk
Genetics
APOE4 was the starting point, but not the whole story. Other genes can influence inflammation, detoxification, methylation, and lipid metabolism. I began to view genetics as a framework – not a diagnosis – helping me understand where I might need more support.
Family History
Patterns in our families provide important context. Early cardiovascular disease, cognitive decline, or metabolic issues can point to underlying vulnerabilities that may not yet show up clearly in labs.
Baseline Biomarkers
Lab data helps translate risk into something measurable. Markers related to lipids, inflammation, glucose regulation, and nutrient status give a clearer picture of what is happening beneath the surface.
Phenotype & Patterns
How we actually respond matters as much as the numbers themselves. Energy, sleep, recovery, and how our bodies handle food all provide signals that help refine our approach.
Trends over Time
Single lab values can be misleading. What matters more is direction – whether things are improving, stable, or drifting. Tracking over time becomes one of the most valuable tools we have. Be sure to download your own lab tracker from the Resources section.