Literature DB >> 16329620

Reference intervals for testosterone, androstenedione and SHBG levels in healthy females and males from birth until old age.

Martin W Elmlinger1, Werner Kühnel, Henning Wormstall, Peter Claus Döller.   

Abstract

The measurement of androgen levels is important in the follow-up of sexual development and in the diagnosis of disturbances of the gonadal function in children and adults. The aim of this study was to evaluate the age dependence of the serum concentrations of testosterone, androstenedione, and SHBG from birth until old age using the IMMULITE 2000 automated assay system (DPC, Los Angeles). Testosterone and androstenedione median levels were very high during the first weeks of life due to residual maternal hCG and decreased to low basal levels around the detection limit of the assay. With the onset of puberty around the age of 10 years both parameters increased strongly, reaching a maximum at about 17 years (testosterone: > 20-fold in boys, 2-fold in girls; androstenedione: 10-fold in boys, 5-fold in girls). In both girls and boys, we measured a decline in the SHBG medians during sexual maturation. This decline was more pronounced in boys (median 78.3 to 26.2 nmol/l from Tanner stage 1 to 5) since the higher androgen levels are thought to down-regulate SHBG. In male adults a continuous decrease was seen for testosterone from a median of 16.1 nmol/l in age group 21-30 years to 9.7 nmol/l in the age group > 70 years. In women the testosterone levels which were only about 5% of that of men from the same age group decreased only slightly, starting from a median of 0.9 to 0.6 nmol/l. In both sexes androstenedione levels decreased continuously during aging. In contrast to the androgen levels, the median SHBG levels increased steadily in men from 20.8 to 44.5 nmol/l, while the median SHBG levels in women decreased from 78.3 to 44.5 nmol/l in the age group of 61-70 years. Interestingly, the SHBG levels rose again in women of the group > 70 years. The reference intervals elaborated here may help in the assessment of the status of sexual development, and to diagnose pathologies of the gonadal axis or hypogonadism during aging.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16329620

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Lab        ISSN: 1433-6510            Impact factor:   1.138


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