A clinical trial using live hookworms as therapy delivered results pharmaceutical executives can’t replicate. In an Australian study led by Dr. Paul Jackerman, pre-diabetic patients infected with the parasites saw significant reductions in blood glucose and insulin resistance, with some effectively cured. Most participants opted to keep their worms after the trial concluded, citing improved metabolic health and unexpected boosts in mood and sleep quality, as reported on Radiolab.
"Participants saw decreased blood glucose and weight loss, while the placebo group continued to decline. Some patients were effectively cured of their pre-diabetic status during the trial."
- Radiolab
The mechanism is a biological hack. Hookworms secrete proteins to calm the human immune system, ensuring their own survival. This action, researchers theorize, inadvertently treats the inflammatory underpinnings of modern autoimmune and metabolic diseases. Dr. Paul Jackerman argues on Radiolab that by eradicating hookworms a century ago, we deleted a co-evolved immune regulator, trading historical lethargy for today’s epidemics of asthma, allergies, and Crohn’s.
The therapy faces an intractable regulatory wall. The FDA’s approval pathways are built for standardized chemical compounds, not living organisms cultivated in human hosts. Jasper Lawrence once ran a business mailing hookworms to patients before being forced overseas by regulators. The logistical hurdle is fundamental: you can’t easily culture hookworms in a lab, requiring human "worm farms" for production.
This impasse has split the field. One path leads to a thriving black market for self-infection. The other, pursued by researchers, aims to identify and synthetically manufacture the specific calming proteins the worms secrete. Until a pill is developed, a treatment with compelling clinical data remains trapped outside the medical establishment, a casualty of regulatory design.
"The transition from 'poop to pill' is a logistical nightmare. You cannot easily culture hookworms in a lab; you need human 'worm farms' to produce the larvae."
- Radiolab
The resistance highlights a broader tension in medicine, echoed in other podcast discussions. On The Peter Attia Drive, the host argues that for most chronic diseases, measuring the phenotype - actual biological outputs like blood glucose - is more actionable than genetic predictions. Similarly, hookworm therapy represents a direct biological intervention, bypassing complex genetic and pharmaceutical intermediaries for a blunt, effective tool the system refuses to assimilate.



