Baseline labs are the denominator for every subsequent reading. A bloodwork without pre-cycle baseline is a number without a reference — you cannot detect drift in a value whose starting point is unknown. The 80–150 EUR cost of a private direct-to-consumer panel is the cheapest insurance line in protocol design.
The full pre-cycle panel — by physiological system
Hormones
- Total testosterone — baseline for all suppression and recovery comparisons.
- Free testosterone — measured by direct assay or calculated via Vermeulen equation from total T + SHBG + albumin. The biologically active fraction; the number that maps to symptoms.
- SHBG — mandatory alongside total and free T. Predicts compound response: low-SHBG users see amplified effects from stanozolol and oxandrolone; high-SHBG users need dose adjustments upward for equivalent clinical effect.
- Estradiol — sensitive LC-MS/MS assay specifically. Standard immunoassay (ECLIA, ELISA) overestimates low values and underestimates high values in the male reference range. Request the sensitive assay by name; many default panels order the immunoassay.
- LH and FSH — pituitary signals. Necessary to distinguish on-cycle shutdown from pre-existing secondary hypogonadism. Users occasionally discover at pre-TRT workup that their pre-cycle LH is already suppressed; the recovery story changes if known at the start rather than discovered during PCT.
- Prolactin — relevant for 19-nor compounds (nandrolone, trenbolone) and GH/peptide protocols. Elevated baseline prolactin warrants pituitary MRI workup to exclude prolactinoma before cycle initiation.
- TSH, free T4, free T3 — thyroid panel. Subclinical hypothyroidism produces fatigue, weight stubbornness, and mood symptoms that get mis-attributed to the AAS if not ruled out pre-cycle. Free T3 is the biologically active hormone; the panel is incomplete without it.
Liver
- ALT — hepatocyte-specific transaminase. Baseline establishes the threshold above which on-cycle elevation is meaningful.
- AST — non-specific (also produced in skeletal muscle). Interpret only paired with ALT and CK.
- GGT — sensitive marker for cholestatic injury. Rises before ALT on stanozolol and methandrostenolone. Routinely omitted from standard panels; request it by name.
- ALP — alkaline phosphatase. Elevated in cholestatic injury; paired GGT elevation confirms hepatic origin.
- Total and direct bilirubin — direct bilirubin >0.3 mg/dL signals clinical cholestasis irrespective of transaminase values.
Kidneys
- Creatinine — caveat: rises non-linearly with skeletal muscle mass and supplementation (creatine monohydrate). Heavy lifters with normal renal function routinely read 1.2–1.4 mg/dL without pathology.
- BUN — protein catabolism marker; rises with high-protein diet, contextual.
- eGFR — calculated glomerular filtration rate. CKD-EPI equation is more accurate than MDRD for AAS-using populations.
- Cystatin C — alternative GFR marker independent of muscle mass. Worth one-time measurement for any user with elevated creatinine pre-cycle to rule out true renal dysfunction versus muscle-mass artefact.
Lipids
- Total cholesterol, HDL, LDL, triglycerides, non-HDL — standard lipid panel.
- ApoB — superior cardiovascular risk marker. Counts atherogenic particles directly rather than estimating cholesterol mass within them. Target <90 mg/dL general population, <70 mg/dL with cardiovascular risk factors.
- Lp(a) — genetic cardiovascular risk marker. Rarely changes on cycle; measure once in life. Values >50 mg/dL signal elevated baseline cardiovascular risk independent of any other lipid marker and recalibrate downstream protocol decisions.
Blood count
- CBC with differential — full white-cell breakdown.
- Hematocrit, hemoglobin, RBC — baseline for erythrocytosis monitoring. The cardiovascular-relevant parameter most likely to shift on any injectable AAS protocol.
- Platelets — rarely move on injectables but transiently depressed on some 17α-alkylated orals.
- Ferritin — iron stores. Critical baseline if regular phlebotomy is planned for HCT management; iron overload from supplementation plus donation cessation is a subtle failure mode.
Metabolic
- Fasting glucose — baseline insulin sensitivity proxy.
- HbA1c — 3-month glycaemic average. Mandatory before HGH or insulin-sensitive protocols.
- Fasting insulin — paired with glucose enables HOMA-IR calculation, the practical metric for insulin resistance assessment. Worth running before any GH/MK-677 protocol.
Inflammation
- hsCRP (high-sensitivity C-reactive protein) — systemic inflammation baseline. Inexpensive; highly informative longitudinally. Rising hsCRP across multiple cycles is a tell for undetected chronic inflammation.
- Homocysteine — cardiovascular risk marker reflecting B-vitamin status. Worth running once.
Why every line of the panel matters
The interpretive power of any on-cycle reading is the delta from baseline, not the absolute value. ALT 45 at baseline → ALT 85 at week 6 on Dianabol is the expected pattern (~80% rise), no action indicated. ALT 25 at baseline → ALT 85 at week 6 is a 240% rise — same final value, completely different signal, dose-reduction or oral discontinuation indicated.
This delta-detection requires both endpoints. Skipping the baseline costs nothing on day one and costs everything at week 6 when the bloodwork comes back ambiguous.
The EU lab context
Private direct-to-consumer labs across the EU offer pre-built “hormone optimisation” or “pre-cycle” panels at 80–180 EUR: Synevo (PL/RO/DE), Alpha Labs, Medicover, Randox Health (UK), Blue Horizon (UK). Request the sensitive estradiol assay by name regardless of which panel is selected — it is rarely default.
Avoid running this through national health insurance. General practitioners will not order hormone panels without clinical indication, and the documented medical record complicates unrelated care later — insurance underwriting, occupational medicine, future specialist referrals.
Optional but worth adding
- Vitamin D (25-OH): most trainees are deficient; hormone optimisation stalls at serum <30 ng/mL. Supplement to 40–60 ng/mL before cycle initiation.
- PSA: mandatory at age 40+; recommended at 35+ for any AAS protocol. Baseline is what makes a future rise meaningful.
- Coronary artery calcium (CAC) score: imaging not blood, but the most predictive cardiovascular marker for the AAS-using population. Baseline at age 40 or with strong family history.
- DEXA scan: baseline body composition and bone density. Recommended every 3–5 years for long-term users.
No baseline, no protocol. This is not a hardline rule about research ethics; it is the minimum information requirement to operate pharmacologically.