Biohacker Bryan Johnson Spent Millions Trying to Live Forever. His Stomach Was Still Eating Itself.

Autoimmune gastritis silently damaged Johnson’s stomach for 11 years despite a 30-person medical team and $2M annual spend

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Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Bryan Johnson’s autoimmune gastritis evaded an obsessive $2M/year health protocol for 11 years.
  • AIG silently destroys parietal cells, risking anemia, nerve damage, and gastric cancer if undiagnosed.
  • Johnson explores unapproved treatments like CAR-T therapy and JAK inhibitors, rejecting AIG as incurable.

Eleven years of flagged bloodwork. Roughly $2 million annually poured into the most obsessive health-tracking protocol on the planet. And still, a chronic autoimmune disease was quietly destroying Bryan Johnson’s stomach lining the entire time. The Blueprint founder and architect of the $1 million-per-year Immortals longevity program disclosed in mid-2026 that he has autoimmune gastritis (AIG) — a condition with no approved cure. The man runs a 30-person medical team. Biology, it turns out, doesn’t care about the headcount.

What’s Actually Happening Inside His Gut

AIG silently destroys the stomach cells needed to absorb iron and B12 — and it evaded Johnson’s extensive testing for over a decade.

AIG is an autoimmune condition where the immune system attacks parietal cells — the stomach’s acid-producing units that also generate intrinsic factor, essential for B12 absorption. As those cells are destroyed, iron and B12 absorption deteriorates, eventually risking anemia and nerve damage. The condition commonly co-occurs with autoimmune thyroid disease, which Johnson has had since age 21, according to Medindia.

Key clinical facts:

  • Johnson’s only early signal was 11 years of unexplained low ferritin — consistently flagged, never fully explained
  • His colonoscopy was normal; AIG was confirmed through elevated anti-parietal cell antibodies and a stomach biopsy showing early atrophy
  • Long-term, AIG raises the risk of iron-deficiency anemia, nerve damage, and gastric cancer; despite affecting an estimated 5–20 per 1,000 people, most cases go undiagnosed — a gap one study underscored by finding AIG antibodies in roughly 18% of patients with precancerous gastric lesions, only about 1% of whom had ever been diagnosed

“My stomach is eating itself,” Johnson posted on Instagram.

The standard lifestyle advice for gastritis — quit smoking, cut alcohol, avoid junk food — reads like Johnson’s existing protocol. He already does all of it. His personal theory points to years of sugary cereals, fast food, and high-stress years as Braintree’s CEO before his health transformation, though he acknowledges that’s interpretation, not proven causation.

Johnson isn’t accepting “incurable” as a verdict. He’s mapping his immune pathways, exploring JAK inhibitors, IL-17 blockade, and frontier options like CAR-T cell therapies and AI-designed antibodies — none of which are approved for AIG. It reads like a prestige TV plot twist where the protagonist decides to rewrite the script entirely.

The Uncomfortable Math for Everyone Else

If the most data-saturated self-tracking protocol alive missed a slow, silent disease for a decade, the quantified-self movement has some hard questions to answer.

“No condition should be presumed incurable simply because no one has yet tried to cure it with today’s stack,” Johnson said, according to the Times of India.

The lesson applies to anyone relying on wearable data or routine bloodwork to catch slow disease early. Having every fitness tracker on the market doesn’t prevent a pulled hamstring if the data is being misread. Johnson corrected his iron deficiency with IV infusions but hasn’t touched the underlying autoimmune process. The cancer surveillance clock is running. His experimental immune work may yield nothing — or something that matters well beyond one biohacker’s gut. Either way, the body keeps its own score.

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