Limited time offer! 10% off your first blood test order!
No products in the cart.

take the next step

Schedule an Appointment


Men's Health

Essential Men's Health Check

28-marker men's health panel covering organ function, cholesterol, testosterone, PSA, thyroid, and vitamin D in a single collection.

28 biomarkers Home kit available Includes PSA and testosterone Results in 3 to 5 working days
4.8 (214 reviews)
£99.00

or 4 interest-free payments of £24.75 with Klarna

Collection method Self-collected fingerstick
Quantity 1 kit
1
UKAS accredited ISO 15189 laboratory
UK GDPR secure Barcoded, anonymous sample
GMC-reviewed Physician-signed report
Essential Men's Health Check
UKAS ISO 15189
Accredited
Product description

A 28-marker essential health panel tailored for men — covering full blood count, organ function, cholesterol, testosterone, thyroid, PSA.

The Essential Men’s Health Check is designed as a comprehensive annual baseline for men who want to understand their health across multiple systems without waiting for symptoms to appear. It combines 28 biomarkers across seven domains.

Full blood count: screens for anaemia, infection, and haematological conditions. Organ function: liver (six markers including ALT, AST, GGT, bilirubin, albumin, total protein) and kidney (creatinine, eGFR, urea, uric acid). Cardiovascular: total cholesterol, LDL, HDL, triglycerides, and non-HDL cholesterol. Hormonal: total testosterone and SHBG (with calculated free testosterone). Thyroid: TSH. Cancer screening: PSA (prostate-specific antigen). Nutritional: vitamin D (25-OH).

This panel is suitable as an annual check from age 25 onwards, and is particularly relevant for men over 40 who have not had a recent comprehensive blood assessment. Home fingerstick kit available; mobile phlebotomist or clinic appointment recommended for best testosterone accuracy. GMC-physician reviewed results within 3 to 5 working days.

Reviewed by the Trupoint medical board · Last updated May 2026
What we measure

Every biomarker, explained

Understand what each marker measures, why it matters, and what the science says — not just a list of numbers.

28
Biomarkers in this panel
7
Physiological systems covered
1
Sample
24 - 48
Hours
2 MARKERS

Full Blood Count

Oxygen-carrying protein in red blood cells; low levels indicate anaemia, high levels may suggest dehydration or polycythaemia.

Total red blood cells per volume of blood; assesses oxygen transport capacity.

Proportion of blood volume occupied by red blood cells; elevated in dehydration and polycythaemia.

Total immune cell count; elevated in infection or inflammation, low in bone marrow suppression.

Clotting cells; low levels increase bleeding risk, high levels may suggest reactive thrombocytosis.

Average red blood cell size; distinguishes iron deficiency anaemia (small cells) from B12/folate deficiency (large cells).

2 MARKERS

Liver Function

Liver enzyme released with hepatocyte damage; elevated in fatty liver, alcohol excess, and hepatitis.

Enzyme present in liver and muscle; elevated ALT-to-AST ratio distinguishes hepatic from muscle sources.

Sensitive marker for alcohol use, bile duct disease, and early liver stress.

Biliary and bone enzyme; elevated in bile duct obstruction, bone disease, or liver infiltration.

Breakdown product of haem; elevated in liver disease, haemolysis, or biliary obstruction.

Liver-produced protein reflecting synthetic function and nutritional status; low in chronic liver disease.

2 MARKERS

Kidney Function

Muscle metabolism waste product cleared by the kidneys; elevated levels indicate impaired renal function.

Calculated estimate of kidney filtration efficiency; the primary clinical marker for chronic kidney disease staging.

Nitrogen waste product of protein metabolism; elevated in dehydration, high protein intake, or kidney impairment.

Purine metabolism end product; elevated levels cause gout and are associated with metabolic syndrome.

2 MARKERS

Cardiovascular

Overall cholesterol burden; context depends on the breakdown between HDL, LDL, and triglycerides.

Low-density lipoprotein; primary driver of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease risk.

High-density lipoprotein; cardioprotective; higher levels reduce cardiovascular risk.

Blood fats reflecting carbohydrate and alcohol intake; elevated in metabolic syndrome and cardiovascular risk.

All atherogenic lipoprotein fractions combined; a more complete cardiovascular risk indicator than LDL alone.

2 MARKERS

Hormonal

Primary male androgen; affects energy, libido, muscle mass, bone density, and mood.

Carrier protein for testosterone; used to calculate free testosterone and assess bioavailable androgen.

2 MARKERS

Cancer Screening

Prostate gland protein elevated in benign enlargement, inflammation, and prostate cancer; age-specific reference ranges apply.

2 MARKERS

Thyroid and Nutrition

Primary screening marker for thyroid dysfunction; hypothyroidism in men causes fatigue, weight gain, and testosterone-like symptom overlap.

Essential for testosterone production, bone health, immune function, and mood regulation; widely deficient in UK men.

Is this right for me?

Who this test is for

This panel is designed for adults who want a comprehensive, evidence-based picture of their metabolic health — not a GP referral panel.

Men Aged 25

Men aged 25 and over wanting a comprehensive annual health baseline

Those Over 40 Who Have Not

Those over 40 who have not had a thorough blood assessment in recent years

Men Experiencing Fatigue

Men experiencing fatigue, weight gain, or reduced performance

Those With A Family History Of

Those with a family history of cardiovascular disease, prostate issues, or diabetes

Not appropriate for Men needing an extended cardiovascular panel with ApoB and Lp(a). Those requiring a full fertility assessment including FSH, LH, and semen analysis
Transparency

Test limitations

Testosterone accuracy is highest when the sample is collected before 10 am following a fasted venous draw; fingerstick collection is available but may produce marginally less precise testosterone values. PSA can be elevated by benign prostatic hyperplasia, urinary tract infection, recent ejaculation, or vigorous cycling — all these factors should be avoided in the 48 hours before testing. A normal PSA does not exclude prostate cancer and should not be used as a standalone screening tool without clinical context. TSH alone does not assess full thyroid function; if thyroid symptoms are present, the Thyroid Function Plus panel is recommended. eGFR in this panel uses the CKD-EPI formula and is not intended for acute kidney injury assessment.

Reviewed annually by our medical advisory board.
The process

How it works

From order to physician-reviewed report in as little as three working days.

Day 0

Order online and receive your home collection kit within 2 to 3 working days

Day 1

Collect your fasted morning sample (for testosterone, before 10 am is optimal)

Day 2

Return your sample via the prepaid Royal Mail envelope

Day 3

Physician-reviewed results on your dashboard within 3 to 5 working days

Sample collection

Choose how you collect

Three options designed to fit your schedule, location, and preference — all producing a laboratory-standard sample.

Eligibility

Adults 18+ in mainland UK. Not suitable if you have had a transfusion in the last 3 months.

Availability

Order anytime; kit dispatched within 24 hours Mon–Fri.

Turnaround

Allow 24–48 hours for sample transit on top of lab processing time.

Why Trupoint

Built on rigorous science and UK regulatory standards

Every test is processed in a UKAS ISO 15189-accredited laboratory, overseen by GMC-registered physicians, and governed by UK GDPR. No overseas processing, no offshore data.

ISO 15189 accredited laboratory
CQC-registered collection service
GMC-registered physician review
GDPR-compliant data handling
MHRA-compliant sample processing
2.4M+
tests processed
99.4%
on-time results
11 yrs
average lab tenure
Before your test

Preparation instructions

Follow these guidelines to ensure accurate, reproducible results. Most markers are sensitive to recent food, exercise, and sleep.

Please do

  • Fast for at least 8 hours before collection — water only
  • Collect your sample before 10 am for accurate testosterone
  • Avoid ejaculation for 48 hours before testing (PSA accuracy)

Please avoid

  • Do not take testosterone supplements or gels on the morning of collection
  • Do not cycle vigorously in the 48 hours before testing (PSA accuracy)
  • Do not collect during an active urinary tract infection
Support

Frequently asked questions

Can't find your answer? Our clinical support team is available Monday to Friday, 9am–5pm.

Contact support

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is PSA included in a general health check?

Prostate-specific antigen (PSA) is a protein produced by prostate gland cells. Elevated levels can indicate benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), prostatitis, or prostate cancer. While PSA is not a perfect screening test — it can be elevated in benign conditions and normal in some early cancers — it provides useful baseline data. Men aged 50 and over, or younger men with a family history of prostate cancer, benefit most from monitoring PSA trends over time. A single elevated reading requires follow-up rather than alarm; your physician report will interpret it in the context of your age and risk profile.

What should I do if my testosterone is low?

A low testosterone result, particularly when accompanied by symptoms such as fatigue, low libido, mood changes, and reduced muscle mass, warrants a GP consultation. Your physician report will indicate whether the finding is clinically significant and what next steps are appropriate. Options explored by a GP include lifestyle assessment (sleep, exercise, weight, stress), repeat testing to confirm, and if appropriate, referral to an endocrinologist. Testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) is available in the UK on prescription for confirmed, symptomatic hypogonadism — private self-supplementation should never be undertaken based on a single test result.

What causes elevated GGT in men?

GGT (gamma-glutamyl transferase) is a sensitive liver enzyme that rises with regular alcohol consumption, even at moderate levels. It is also elevated in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), biliary tract disease, and in those taking enzyme-inducing medications. An isolated elevated GGT in an otherwise healthy man with no other liver enzyme abnormalities often reflects alcohol intake or early fatty liver. Reducing alcohol for 4 to 6 weeks and retesting typically normalises GGT if alcohol is the primary cause — and provides a useful functional indicator of liver health.

What is a healthy cholesterol level for men?

In the UK, NHS targets for cardiovascular risk reduction are: total cholesterol below 5.0 mmol/L; LDL below 3.0 mmol/L (below 1.8 mmol/L for those at high cardiovascular risk); HDL above 1.0 mmol/L in men; and triglycerides below 1.7 mmol/L. Non-HDL cholesterol below 3.9 mmol/L is also used as a comprehensive atherogenic target. These are population-level reference points; your physician report will assess your individual profile in the context of your overall cardiovascular risk factors, including blood pressure, family history, and lifestyle.

How does vitamin D affect testosterone?

Vitamin D receptors are found in Leydig cells — the testosterone-producing cells in the testes — and research consistently shows a positive correlation between vitamin D status and testosterone levels in men. Several intervention studies have found that vitamin D supplementation in deficient men raises total testosterone, particularly when baseline deficiency is moderate to severe. Vitamin D deficiency is extremely common in the UK, particularly during autumn and winter. Monitoring and correcting vitamin D status is a simple, evidence-based step that may support healthy testosterone levels alongside other lifestyle factors.

How often should I repeat this panel?

Annual testing is appropriate for most men over 40 as a comprehensive health baseline. Younger men in good health may retest every 2 years unless specific concerns arise. If any results are outside the reference range, the physician report will recommend a specific retesting timeline — for example, after dietary changes for cholesterol, or after B12 supplementation for anaemia. PSA should ideally be trended over time: a rising PSA — even within the normal range — may be clinically meaningful and warrants medical review.