Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6182356 Fertility and Sterility 2013 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveTo identify correlates and longitudinal changes in circulating antimüllerian hormone (AMH) levels as a marker of ovarian primordial follicle recruitment in normal peripubertal girls.DesignObservational study using mixed longitudinal and cross-sectional analyses.SettingNot applicable.Patient(s)Unselected girls assessed at ages 7-11 years.Intervention(s)None.Main Outcome Measure(s)AMH, inhibin B, and FSH levels were analyzed in blood samples collected at ages 7, 9, and 11 years for longitudinal analyses and at age 8 years for cross-sectional analyses.Result(s)In the cross-sectional analysis, AMH levels at age 8 years were lower in pubertal girls (median 25.0 pmol/L, interquartile range [IQR] 16.0-33.9; n = 39) than in prepubertal girls (33.5 pmol/L, IQR 22.3-49.1; n = 342). In prepubertal girls, higher AMH levels were associated with higher inhibin B levels, lower FSH levels, and larger body mass index at age 8 years and subsequently with later age at menarche. AMH levels were unrelated to birth weight or birth length. In the longitudinal analysis, AMH levels increased between ages 7 (median 27.0 pmol/L, IQR 19.2-34) and 9 years (32.0 pmol/L, IQR 26.5-42.7), then declined between 9 and 11 years (26.5 pmol/L, IQR 19-42.25) with high intraindividual correlation in AMH levels between ages 7 and 9 years and 7 and 11 years.Conclusion(s)Measurement of circulating AMH and inhibin B levels suggests that the rate of ovarian primordial follicle recruitment increases in the prepubertal years then declines again following the onset of puberty as follicular activity pattern changes.

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