Choriogonadotropin

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Human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) together with lutropin (LH or luteinizing hormone), follitropin (FSH/follicle-stimulating hormone) and thyreotropin (TSH/thyroid stimulating hormone), belongs to the group of glycoprotein hormones. Unlike other glycoprotein hormones produced in the adenohypophysis, hCG is produced by the syncytiotrophoblast of the placenta during pregnancy. It stimulates the growth of the corpus luteum, which forms estrogens and progesterone. Chemically, hCG consists of two subunits - alpha and beta. The alpha subunits of all glycoproteins are identical, the biological specificity of these hormones is therefore determined by the beta subunits.

syncytiotrophoblast, primary villi
syncytiotrophoblast, secondary villi


The presence of hCG in a woman's blood or urine is evidence of pregnancy and helps to monitor its progress. A value lower than the normal limit of hCG is a sign of an ectopic pregnancy, stillbirth or impending abortion. In contrast, elevated hCG levels signal multiple pregnancies and allow early diagnosis of trisomy 21 - Down syndrome (along with AFP and uE3 assays). HCG production increases rapidly in early pregnancy. We record the maximum growth between the 80th and 90th day of pregnancy, then its production decreases (at 4 months), and after the 25th week the hCG value remains stable until delivery. Its urinary excretion ends about the 7th day after delivery, i.e. after expulsion of the fetus and placenta.

HCG levels during pregnancy[edit | edit source]

Time since conception Time since the last menstruation mIU/l
7 days 21 days 0–5
14 days 28 days 3–426
21 days 35 days 18–7 340
28 days 42 days 1 080–56 500
35–42 days 49–56 days 7 650–229 000
43–64 days 57–78 days 25 700–288 000
57–78 days 79–100 days 13 300–253 000
17.–24. week Second trimester 4 060–65 400
Od 25. week Third trimester 3 640–117 000


Links[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]

Human Chorionic Gonadotropin (hCG): Reference Range, Interpretation, Collection and Panels. Diseases & Conditions - Medscape Reference [online]. Copyright © 1994 [cit. 26.03.2022]. Available from <https://emedicine.medscape.com/article/2089158-overview>

ScienceDirect. ScienceDirect [online]. Copyright © [cit. 26.03.2022]. Available from <https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0303720713005248>

What is Human Chorionic Gonadotropin (hCG)?. Verywell Family - Know More. Grow Together. [online]. Available from <https://www.verywellfamily.com/hcg-human-chorionic-gonadotropin-2371625>