Method: Derived from FDA-cleared laboratory results. This ratio/index is not an FDA-cleared test. It aids clinician-directed risk assessment and monitoring and is not a stand-alone diagnosis. Inputs: CBC differentials.

The Systemic Immune-Inflammation Index (SII) integrates platelets, neutrophils, and lymphocytes.

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FAQs about Systemic Immune-Inflammation Index Test

Systemic Immune-Inflammation Index (SII) is a calculated marker derived from a CBC with differential that combines neutrophils, lymphocytes, and platelets into a single number. It was designed to capture the balance between inflammation (often reflected by higher neutrophils and platelets) and immune regulation (often reflected by lymphocytes). By integrating three cell types, SII can reflect immune-inflammatory dynamics that single markers may miss.

SII acts like a snapshot of immune balance between the innate immune system (neutrophils and platelets) and adaptive immunity (lymphocytes). When systemic inflammation rises, neutrophils and platelets often increase while lymphocytes may decrease, pushing SII higher. Lower SII values generally suggest a calmer, more balanced immune state with less systemic activation, supporting resilience across cardiovascular and metabolic systems.

SII is important because it connects immune activity and inflammation to outcomes across multiple systems. Persistently elevated SII is associated with chronic inflammation patterns linked to cardiovascular strain, metabolic issues like insulin resistance, and cancer-related immune shifts. Tracking SII over time can help identify “smoldering” inflammation earlier, before it contributes to endothelial dysfunction, tissue remodeling, or more entrenched chronic disease patterns.

A high SII typically reflects heightened systemic inflammation driven by increased neutrophils and platelets relative to lymphocytes. This pattern is commonly seen with acute infections, chronic inflammatory conditions, metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular stress, and malignancy. Inflammation at this level can contribute to arterial plaque formation, oxidative stress, and worsening insulin resistance. The degree and persistence of elevation often correlate with overall disease severity and prognosis.

Low SII values usually suggest reduced immune-inflammatory activity and are generally favorable, reflecting balanced coordination among neutrophils, lymphocytes, and platelets. An optimal SII range indicates immune readiness without chronic activation, supporting tissue repair, metabolic stability, and pathogen defense. Very low SII values are uncommon; when present, they may sometimes appear with immune suppression or bone marrow underactivity rather than “extra good” health.

Yes. SII can help explain symptoms like fatigue, joint pain, or recurring infections by revealing systemic immune activation that may not be obvious on standard single markers. Because it integrates neutrophils, lymphocytes, and platelets, it can capture immune-inflammatory balance shifts that a lone white blood cell value might miss. It’s most useful when interpreted alongside symptoms and trended to see whether inflammation is persistent or resolving.

SII can rise with age, acute illness, surgery, and pregnancy due to physiologic immune shifts. Medications that affect white blood cells or platelets can also change SII, sometimes independent of inflammation severity. Because short-term events can temporarily elevate the index, interpretation is most meaningful when you consider timing (recent infection or recovery) and whether the elevation persists across repeat testing rather than relying on one isolated result.

SII is best interpreted with related markers and context. A CBC with differential provides the underlying neutrophil and lymphocyte values, while platelets add clotting-associated inflammatory signaling into the index. CRP offers an additional inflammation signal that can support or refine interpretation. Together with your symptom pattern and medical context, this combined view helps determine whether a high SII is likely acute (e.g., infection) or persistent (e.g., chronic inflammation).

SII is useful for trending because it can reflect changes in inflammatory burden as neutrophils, lymphocytes, and platelets shift. Repeating SII over time can help track whether lifestyle changes (diet quality, sleep, physical activity, metabolic health support) or targeted therapies are reducing systemic activation. The most meaningful insights come from comparing results across consistent time points and pairing trends with changes in symptoms and other inflammatory markers.

SII provides benefits beyond single markers because it integrates three immune components - neutrophils, lymphocytes, and platelets - capturing the interplay between acute immune response, adaptive immunity, and clotting-related inflammation. This can reveal immune overdrive patterns that may relate to cardiovascular risk, metabolic stress, and cancer-related immune shifts. While CRP reflects inflammation intensity, SII adds immune balance context, which can be helpful for risk stratification and monitoring.