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Sex Hormones

17-hydroxyprogesterone Biomarker Test

Measure your 17-hydroxyprogesterone to assess adrenal cortisol-androgen balance, screen for congenital adrenal hyperplasia, and distinguish CAH from PCOS to guide treatment and fertility.

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Sample type:
Blood
HSA/FSA:
Accepted
Collection method:
In-person at the lab, or at-home

Key Benefits

  • Check adrenal hormone precursor to cortisol; screens for congenital adrenal hyperplasia.
  • Spot inherited adrenal enzyme issues; high levels suggest 21‑hydroxylase deficiency.
  • Clarify causes of hirsutism, acne, or irregular periods from adrenal androgens.
  • Flag late‑onset CAH versus PCOS when androgen excess blurs the picture.
  • Guide treatment in known CAH; help adjust steroid dosing and prevent adrenal crises.
  • Protect fertility; identify treatable adrenal causes of ovulation problems, miscarriage risk, and subfertility.
  • Track trends reliably; use early‑morning, follicular‑phase draws and consistent lab methods.
  • Best interpreted alongside ACTH testing, cortisol, androstenedione, and your symptoms.

What is 17-hydroxyprogesterone?

17-hydroxyprogesterone (17‑OHP) is a steroid intermediate made mainly in the adrenal cortex, with smaller contributions from the ovaries and testes. It is created when progesterone is modified at the 17th carbon by 17α‑hydroxylase (CYP17A1). From there, 17‑OHP sits at a branch point: it can be converted toward cortisol via 21‑hydroxylase (CYP21A2) to form 11‑deoxycortisol, or diverted toward androstenedione and other androgens through 17,20‑lyase activity. It is not a final hormone but a “stepping‑stone” in steroid synthesis.

Functionally, 17‑OHP acts as a precursor rather than a hormone with major direct effects. Its production is driven by pituitary ACTH (adrenocorticotropic hormone), so circulating levels mirror adrenal steroid‑making activity and the performance of key enzymes in the cortisol pathway. In practical terms, 17‑OHP is a window into how readily the adrenal gland can make cortisol and how much steroid flow is being diverted toward androgen production. It is a practical readout of adrenal steroid pathway dynamics.

Why is 17-hydroxyprogesterone important?

17‑hydroxyprogesterone (17‑OHP) is a pivotal steroid intermediate that links the adrenal “stress” pathway (cortisol and aldosterone) with the androgen and progesterone pathways. Because it sits at a branch point, its level reveals how well the adrenal cortex and, in women, the ovaries are converting precursors under ACTH and LH control. It is central in newborn screening for congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) and in evaluating androgen‑related symptoms.

Values vary by age, time of day, and menstrual phase: newborns are higher and then fall; adults are lowest in the morning; women rise in the luteal phase and during pregnancy. In general, adults fall within a mid‑range appropriate for the sampling time.

When 17‑OHP is low, it usually reflects reduced adrenal or ovarian steroidogenesis or ACTH suppression (for example after glucocorticoids). Systemically, this can track with low cortisol physiology—fatigue, low blood pressure, dizziness, and salt craving—though many healthy prepubertal children naturally run low. In women, very low luteal‑phase levels may accompany low‑progesterone states, with short cycles or premenstrual spotting.

When 17‑OHP is high, it often signals a bottleneck at 21‑hydroxylase. In classic CAH, levels are markedly elevated, cortisol and often aldosterone are deficient, and infants risk salt‑wasting crises; girls may have virilization, and boys may show early growth and pubarche. Milder elevations occur in nonclassic CAH, with acne, hirsutism, irregular periods, and subfertility; stress and rare adrenal/ovarian tumors can also raise it.

Big picture: 17‑OHP is a systems biomarker tying the HPA axis to reproductive hormones. Persistently abnormal values point to enzyme defects, chronic ACTH drive, or androgen excess, with implications for growth, fertility, bone health, and cardiometabolic risk.

What Insights Will I Get?

What 17-hydroxyprogesterone tells you. 17-hydroxyprogesterone (17‑OHP) is an adrenal and gonadal steroid intermediate that sits upstream of cortisol and, to a lesser extent, androgens. It is a readout of adrenal enzyme function—especially 21‑hydroxylase—and ACTH drive. Because cortisol influences energy balance, blood pressure, immune tone, and stress resilience, 17‑OHP helps map how well the stress hormone pathway is flowing and whether androgenic byproducts may be accumulating.

Low values usually reflect low adrenal output or efficient conversion downstream to cortisol. They are common in children and in the early follicular phase of the menstrual cycle. Suppressed ACTH (for example, after glucocorticoids) and adrenal insufficiency can both produce low 17‑OHP, which aligns with fatigue, low blood pressure tendency, and reduced stress tolerance. Rarely, 17‑hydroxylase deficiency causes very low 17‑OHP with low sex steroids and hypertension.

Being in range suggests balanced adrenal steroidogenesis with no backlog upstream of 21‑hydroxylase. In adults, appropriate morning values within the age‑ and sex‑specific, and for women the cycle phase–specific, interval indicate a stable HPA axis and low likelihood of congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH). There is no single “best” spot in the range; physiological context determines the expected level.

High values usually reflect a bottleneck at 21‑hydroxylase, leading to accumulation of 17‑OHP and spillover into androgens. This is typical of CAH (classic or nonclassic). Elevations can also appear with high ACTH states (stress, illness), in the luteal phase, in pregnancy, and sometimes in PCOS or adrenal/ovarian tumors. System effects include acne, hirsutism, irregular cycles, and subfertility; in infants, very high levels flag CAH and possible salt‑wasting risk.

Notes: 17‑OHP is pulsatile, highest in the morning, and varies by menstrual phase and pregnancy. Prematurity and acute illness raise neonatal values. Immunoassays can overestimate; LC‑MS/MS is more specific. ACTH stimulation testing refines borderline results.

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Frequently Asked Questions about 17-hydroxyprogesterone

What is 17-hydroxyprogesterone and why is it important in hormone testing?

17-hydroxyprogesterone (17‑OHP) is a steroid intermediate produced mainly in the adrenal cortex and, to a lesser extent, in the ovaries and testes. It acts as a precursor in the synthesis of cortisol and androgens, making it a key marker for adrenal function. Measuring 17‑OHP helps screen for congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH), assess adrenal enzyme activity, and clarify causes of symptoms like hirsutism, acne, or irregular periods. Its levels provide insight into the balance of adrenal steroidogenesis and can guide diagnosis and management of hormone-related disorders.

How does 17-hydroxyprogesterone testing help diagnose congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH)?

17‑hydroxyprogesterone testing is central to diagnosing CAH, especially forms caused by 21‑hydroxylase deficiency. In classic CAH, 17‑OHP levels are markedly elevated due to a bottleneck in cortisol synthesis, leading to excess androgen production. Newborn screening programs routinely measure 17‑OHP to detect CAH early, preventing life-threatening salt-wasting crises. In milder, nonclassic CAH, moderate elevations help explain symptoms like acne, hirsutism, and irregular periods. Testing also helps differentiate CAH from other causes of androgen excess, such as polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS).

What causes high 17-hydroxyprogesterone levels and what do they indicate?

High 17‑hydroxyprogesterone levels usually indicate a block in the 21‑hydroxylase enzyme, leading to accumulation of 17‑OHP and increased androgen production. This is characteristic of both classic and nonclassic CAH. Other causes include high ACTH states (stress, illness), the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle, pregnancy, and, less commonly, adrenal or ovarian tumors. Elevated 17‑OHP can result in symptoms like acne, hirsutism, irregular cycles, and subfertility. In infants, very high levels signal risk for salt-wasting crises and virilization.

What does a low 17-hydroxyprogesterone level mean?

Low 17‑hydroxyprogesterone levels typically reflect reduced adrenal or ovarian steroid production or suppression of ACTH, such as after glucocorticoid therapy. This can be seen in adrenal insufficiency, where symptoms may include fatigue, low blood pressure, dizziness, and salt craving. In healthy children and during the early follicular phase of the menstrual cycle, low levels are normal. Rarely, 17‑hydroxylase deficiency can cause very low 17‑OHP, leading to low sex steroids and hypertension.

How is 17-hydroxyprogesterone testing used to distinguish between CAH and PCOS?

Both CAH and PCOS can present with androgen excess symptoms like hirsutism and irregular periods. However, 17‑hydroxyprogesterone testing helps differentiate the two: persistently high 17‑OHP, especially after ACTH stimulation, points toward CAH (usually 21‑hydroxylase deficiency), while normal or only mildly elevated levels are more typical of PCOS. This distinction is crucial for guiding appropriate treatment and management strategies.

When is the best time to measure 17-hydroxyprogesterone for accurate results?

17‑hydroxyprogesterone levels are highest in the morning and fluctuate with the menstrual cycle and pregnancy. For reliable results, blood samples should be drawn early in the morning, ideally during the follicular phase of the menstrual cycle in women. Consistent lab methods and timing are important for tracking trends and interpreting results accurately. In newborns, values are naturally higher and fall after birth, so age-specific reference ranges are used.

What symptoms or conditions might prompt a doctor to order a 17-hydroxyprogesterone test?

Doctors may order a 17‑hydroxyprogesterone test to investigate symptoms of androgen excess, such as hirsutism, acne, or irregular menstrual cycles. It is also used in the evaluation of infertility, recurrent miscarriages, and suspected adrenal disorders. In newborns, the test is part of routine screening for CAH. Additionally, it helps monitor known cases of CAH, guide steroid dosing, and prevent adrenal crises.

How is 17-hydroxyprogesterone involved in fertility and reproductive health?

17‑hydroxyprogesterone plays a role in reproductive health by reflecting adrenal and ovarian steroid production. Elevated levels can indicate treatable adrenal causes of ovulation problems, subfertility, or increased miscarriage risk. In women, abnormal 17‑OHP may signal underlying CAH or other adrenal disorders affecting fertility. Monitoring and managing 17‑OHP levels can help protect fertility and improve reproductive outcomes.

What factors can affect 17-hydroxyprogesterone levels and lead to inaccurate results?

Several factors can influence 17‑hydroxyprogesterone levels, including time of day, menstrual cycle phase, pregnancy, acute illness, and prematurity in newborns. Stress and certain medications, such as glucocorticoids, can also alter levels. Immunoassay methods may overestimate 17‑OHP, so more specific techniques like LC‑MS/MS are preferred for borderline cases. ACTH stimulation testing can further clarify ambiguous results.

How is 17-hydroxyprogesterone interpreted alongside other hormone tests?

17‑hydroxyprogesterone is best interpreted in conjunction with ACTH, cortisol, androstenedione, and clinical symptoms. This comprehensive approach helps map adrenal steroid pathway dynamics and identify enzyme deficiencies or chronic ACTH drive. For example, high 17‑OHP with low cortisol and high ACTH suggests CAH, while normal values with appropriate symptoms may rule out adrenal causes. Consistent interpretation with other hormone tests ensures accurate diagnosis and effective management.

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