Evaluation of Gonadal Function in 107 Intersex Patients by Means of Serum Antimüllerian Hormone Measurement1
Fetal male sexual differentiation is driven by two testicular hormones: testosterone (synthesized by interstitial Leydig cells) and antimüllerian hormone (AMH; produced by Sertoli cells present in the seminiferous tubules). Intersex states result either from gonadal dysgenesis, in which both Leydig...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism 1999-02, Vol.84 (2), p.627-631 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Fetal male sexual differentiation is driven by two testicular hormones:
testosterone (synthesized by interstitial Leydig cells) and
antimüllerian hormone (AMH; produced by Sertoli cells present in
the seminiferous tubules). Intersex states result either from gonadal
dysgenesis, in which both Leydig and Sertoli cell populations are
affected, or from impaired secretion or action of either testosterone
or AMH. Until now, only Leydig cell function has been assessed in
children with ambiguous genitalia, by means of testosterone assay.
To determine whether serum AMH would help in the diagnosis of
intersex conditions, we assayed serum AMH levels in 107 patients with
ambiguous genitalia of various etiologies. In XY patients, AMH was low
when the intersex condition was caused by abnormal testicular
determination (including pure and partial gonadal dysgenesis) but was
normal or elevated in patients with impaired testosterone secretion,
whereas serum testosterone was low in both groups. AMH was also
elevated during the first year of life and at puberty in intersex
states caused by androgen insensitivity. In 46,XX patients with
a normal male phenotype or ambiguous genitalia, in whom the diagnosis
of female pseudohermaphroditism had been excluded, serum AMH levels
higher than 75 pmol/L were indicative of the presence of testicular
tissue and correlated with the mass of functional testicular
parenchyma.
In conclusion, serum AMH determination is a powerful tool to assess
Sertoli cell function in children with intersex states, and it helps to
distinguish between defects of male sexual differentiation caused by
abnormal testicular determination and those resulting from isolated
impairment of testosterone secretion or action. |
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ISSN: | 0021-972X 1945-7197 |
DOI: | 10.1210/jcem.84.2.5507 |