Abstract

Inhibin B, a gonadal peptide regulating follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) secretion in adults, has been found during gestation in amniotic fluid, but at birth only in term cord blood of male babies. Since no data are available on the evolution of serum inhibin B during the 1st week of life, we studied changes in inhibin B using a specific and sensitive immunoassay in male and female neonates during the 1st week of life in relation to FSH and to evaluate the possible effect of perinatal factors on inhibin B production. Inhibin B was measured by a specific monoclonal enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Inhibin B was detectable in cord blood of all eight longitudinally studied male newborns, correlated negatively with the ponderal index and increased significantly on day 5 (from 54.2 +/- 18.5 to 100.4 +/- 34.8 ng/l, P < 0.005). Cord blood inhibin B was detected in only 1 out of 13 screened female neonates. In 48 at term-born females in whom inhibin B was measured on the 5th day of life, only 20 cases had a detectable level (between 8 and 68.6 ng/l). Inhibin B concentrations in cord blood and on day 5 were independent of duration of pregnancy, type of delivery, Apgar score and FSH concentration. A sexual difference in serum inhibin B is already present at the end of gestation and changes in inhibin B during the 1st week of life are independent of follicle stimulating hormone changes and perinatal factors in both sexes. Our data suggest that neonatal inhibin B could be used to study whether the newborn has functional testes, i.e. in babies with ambiguous genitalia and/or bilateral cryptorchidism.

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