Scandinavian Journal of Clinical and Laboratory Investigation | 2019

New reference intervals for cortisol, cortisol binding globulin and free cortisol index in women using ethinyl estradiol

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract Healthy women using contraceptives containing a low dose of an estrogen may have a higher serum concentration of cortisol (s-cortisol) and cortisol binding globulin (s-CBG) than the commonly used upper reference limits. There are no published reference intervals for s-cortisol, s-CBG, serum free cortisol index (s-FCI) or cortisol in saliva (sa-cortisol) for these women. The aim was to establish the above-mentioned reference intervals and document the differences in s-cortisol and s-CBG in one group of women using and another group not using ethinyl estradiol (EE). In this cross-sectional study, the reference limits presented were given as the 2.5 and 97.5 percentiles of the distribution of reference values in a population of 277 healthy volunteer women, aged 18–45\u2009years. 157 women were not using any type of estrogen, while 120 women were using contraceptives containing a daily dose of 15–35\u2009μg of EE. Serum and salivary cortisol, and serum CBG were measured using standard laboratory methods. S-FCI was calculated as s-cortisol/s-CBG. The reference intervals for s-cortisol in samples collected at 0800–1030 am in women using and not using EE contraception were: 284–994\u2009nmol/L and 159–569\u2009nmol/L respectively, and for s-CBG: 847–3366\u2009nmol/L and 860–1940\u2009nmol/L, respectively. For s-FCI and sa-cortisol, no clinically significant differences were found. Sa-cortisol may be the preferred measurand for evaluation of possible hypercortisolism in women using estrogens, since cortisol in saliva is not influenced by estrogen. If assessing morning s-cortisol and s-CBG in women using EE, we recommend using separate – and not the commonly used – reference intervals.

Volume 79
Pages 314 - 319
DOI 10.1080/00365513.2019.1622031
Language English
Journal Scandinavian Journal of Clinical and Laboratory Investigation

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