@Ben H - it looks as though several of us are wondering why there were no control patients from other disease groups (e.g. MS, depression). I'm not able to read much at the moment but is it the case that the controls used were just healthy people, not deconditioned ones? If so, why were there no deconditioned controls?
My impression is that participation is easy from a subject's point of view (you just donate a bit of blood) and from the researcher's (you just stick the blood on the nanoneedle). So the research seems easy and cheap. Surely there are biobank blood samples for disease controls, at least, that would be easy to access?
As a patient I'd love to think that this is the 'holy grail' test for us but without comparison to deconditioned healthies and to other disease groups, the findings are far weaker than they might have been if what seems like easy steps had been taken.
So do you know why those steps weren't taken? Am I underestimating the difficulty of using such additional control groups? I'd really like to know. Are you able to feed that question back to Dr Davis?
Sorry if this has already been answered somewhere - as I said, I'm having trouble reading much.