A Longitudinal Study of Plasma and Urinary Cortisol in Pregnancy and Postpartum

Context:There is a paucity of longitudinal data on plasma and urinary cortisol levels during pregnancy using modern assays. Furthermore, conflicting data exist as to the effect of the low-dose oral contraceptive pill (OCP) on cortisol.Design, Subjects, and Measurements:We conducted a prospective lon...

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Published inThe journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism Vol. 96; no. 5; pp. 1533 - 1540
Main Authors Jung, Caroline, Ho, Jui T., Torpy, David J., Rogers, Anne, Doogue, Matt, Lewis, John G., Czajko, Raymond J., Inder, Warrick J.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Bethesda, MD Oxford University Press 01.05.2011
Copyright by The Endocrine Society
Endocrine Society
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Summary:Context:There is a paucity of longitudinal data on plasma and urinary cortisol levels during pregnancy using modern assays. Furthermore, conflicting data exist as to the effect of the low-dose oral contraceptive pill (OCP) on cortisol.Design, Subjects, and Measurements:We conducted a prospective longitudinal study on morning plasma cortisol (total and free), corticosteroid-binding globulin (CBG), and 24-h urinary free cortisol (UFC) levels in 20 pregnant women during the first, second, and third trimesters and 2–3 months postpartum compared with 12 subjects on low-dose OCP and 15 nonpregnant subjects not taking the OCP (control group).Results:A progressive rise in total plasma cortisol, CBG, and 24-h UFC was demonstrated during pregnancy, peaking during the third trimester (mean 3-fold rise compared with controls). Plasma free cortisol increased 1.6-fold by the third trimester. In the OCP group, total plasma cortisol and CBG were 2.9- and 2.6-fold elevated, respectively, whereas 24-h UFC and plasma free cortisol were not significantly different from controls. Compared with liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry, a commercial immunoassay underestimated mean total plasma cortisol concentrations by 30% during second and third trimesters and in OCP users and overestimated UFC levels by 30–35% during pregnancy.Conclusions:Our study demonstrated elevations in total plasma cortisol and CBG concentrations during pregnancy and with low-dose OCP use. Pregnancy was also associated with significant increases in plasma free cortisol and UFC, suggesting that the rise in total plasma cortisol is contributed to by up-regulation of the maternal hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis in addition to elevated CBG.
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ISSN:0021-972X
1945-7197
1945-7197
DOI:10.1210/jc.2010-2395