Objective: To quantify intraindividual variability of antimüllerian hormone (AMH) as analytical and biological coefficients of variation and assess the effects of variation on clinical classification.

Design: Retrospective cohort study.

Setting: Not applicable.

Patient(s): Thirty-eight women referred by general practitioners.

Intervention(s): None.

Main Outcome Measure(s): Total intraindividual variability (CV), analytical (CV) and biological variability (CV) for each woman and for AMH ranges: low (<5 pmol/L), reduced (5-10), moderate (>10-30) and high (>30 pmol/L), with calculation of proportion of women crossing clinical cutoffs and expected variability around each cutoff.

Result(s): Cycling women (n = 38) contributed 238 blood samples (average 6 samples each). The average total intraindividual AMH variability was 20% (range: 2.1% to 73%). Biological variation was 19% (range: 0 to 71%) and at least twice the analytical variation of 6.9% (range: 4.5% to 16%). Reclassification rates were highest in women with low (33%) or reduced AMH (67%) levels. Expected variations around the 5, 10, and 30 pmol/L cutoffs were 3-7, 7-13, and 20-40 pmol/L, respectively. In a woman with mean AMH in the 10-30 pmol/L range, the span of results that could occur was 7-40 pmol/L.

Conclusion(s): Total variation in AMH was 20%, and the majority of this was biological. Changes in AMH resulted in reclassification in 29% of women and occurred most frequently in those with low and reduced AMH. In cycling women, the variability in AMH should be considered by clinicians, especially if a result is close to a clinical cutoff.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fertnstert.2016.06.009DOI Listing

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