Can you get a false negative pregnancy test in perimenopause

When a woman is trying to conceive, a positive pregnancy test is an incredibly exciting, emotional event. For the 43-year-old who is late for her period and doesn’t know if it means peri-menopause or pregnancy (and is hoping for peri-menopause), it’s the negative test that brings the smile and tears of joy. Before getting out the champagne and celebrating, can you be sure that your negative urine pregnancy test is really negative?

TheHome Laboratory (Otherwise Known As “The Bathroom”)


Most of us take the convenience and accuracy of home pregnancy tests for granted. Today’s tests work by detecting a hormone that is produced by the future placenta and secreted in the mother’s urine by 2 weeks after conception has occurred, and can easily be performed even if you flunked high school chemistry. It’s hard for most women today to imagine not running off to the drugstore within moments of a missed period to pick up a $20 home kit.

But it wasn’t very long ago that simply peeing on a stick wasn’t an option. Prior to the 1950s, women generally just waited until the physical signs of pregnancy confirmed their suspicions. In the 1930s, the “rabbit test” was performed by injecting a rabbit (or frog, or mouse) with urine from a pregnant woman. The rabbit was then “sacrificed”  (the politically correct scientific way of saying “murdered”) in order to check for changes that occur when urine with high hormone levels are put into rabbit ovaries.

Thankfully, by the 1960s, rabbits no longer had to lose their life in the name of confirming pregnancy, but a woman still had to wait until she had missed 2 or 3 periods before traveling to her doctor’s office to give a urine specimen. Then, she’d wait days for a result, which was frequently wrong.

When the first home test finally hit the market in 1978, it took 2 hours to perform and was falsely negative 80% of the time. Despite the drawbacks, for the first time, women could discover this most private of facts in their own bathroom, forever changing the way in which we learn about our bodies.

Today’s pregnancy tests have come a long way, and that negative blue line is generally assurance that no conception has occurred. But there are times when a negative test is not actually negative. For example, some women have very long cycles, so they ovulate later than others. If ovulation and conception occur around day 24 or 25, (a common occurrence in women in their 40s who are no longer having regular cycles) a pregnancy test on day 30 will be a false negative.

Also, if urine is too dilute, the hormone concentration can be too low to be detected on a home kit performed very early in a pregnancy. Therefore a pregnancy test should always be done with first morning urine, when it will be at maximum concentration.

Even a positive pregnancy test does not always translate to a viable (destined to be a baby) pregnancy, especially if you are older, which is good news for the woman who is not hoping to be pregnant. For the same reason, even if you are excited and happy to be pregnant, refrain from putting the news on your Facebook page the minute the faintest of positive lines is discernable.

As great as the home laboratory is, sometimes you need to have the accuracy of a blood test. So don’t wait too long and don’t invest a week’s salary in repeat home pregnancy tests before you see your doctor to find out the truth.

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Test results later in pregnancy may be misleading

Can you get a false negative pregnancy test in perimenopause
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Pregnancy tests can sometimes give a false negative result to women several weeks into their pregnancies, according to research by Ann Gronowski, PhD, a professor of pathology and immunology at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. Her findings led the FDA to change its standards for evaluating new pregnancy tests, but old tests with the false-negative problem are still on the market.

Each year, women in the U.S. rely on some 20 million home pregnancy tests to learn potentially life-altering news. Despite marketing claims that such tests are 99 percent accurate, research at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis over the past decade has shown that up to 5 percent of pregnancy tests return results indicating a woman is not pregnant when, in reality, she is.

Can you get a false negative pregnancy test in perimenopause

Gronowski

Makers of pregnancy tests advise that tests taken in the first week or two after conception could be inaccurate because pregnancy hormones may not have risen high enough to be detected. But Ann Gronowski, PhD, a professor of pathology and immunology, and of obstetrics and gynecology, and medical director of core laboratory services at Barnes-Jewish Hospital, discovered that pregnancy tests can also give incorrect results to women five weeks or more into their pregnancies, when hormone levels tend to be very high. She published the first paper describing this problem in 2009, and since then has continued studying and raising the alarm on this serious but under-recognized issue. Recently, she and colleagues published a paper in the journal Clinical Chemistry, in which they evaluated how likely several pregnancy devices were to give false negative results.

Q: How did you discover that some pregnancy tests produce false negative results?

About a decade ago, a woman came to the emergency department saying she was pregnant and was experiencing cramping and spotting – which can be signs of miscarriage – but the pregnancy test we gave her at the hospital came back negative. She was certain she was pregnant, so we performed a blood test and an ultrasound, both of which confirmed she was pregnant. Shortly afterward, we had a similar experience with a second patient, and at about the same time a colleague at Vanderbilt University called me with a similar observation. So we started investigating, and we published a paper describing the problem and its cause.

Q: Why do pregnancy tests sometimes return false negative results?

We use a kind of pregnancy test in the emergency department that is similar to what you can buy at a drugstore. These tests detect a pregnancy hormone called human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) in a urine sample. One antibody captures the hormone in the urine, and the other serves as a signal. It has a color that becomes visible when it detects the correct hormone. That’s the second blue or pink line you see on a test, and it indicates a positive result (the first line is just there to show the device is working properly).

But a degraded form of the hormone also can be found in the urine, and in some devices the first antibody will bind to the degraded form. The amount of the degraded form, called hCG core fragment, goes up as pregnancy progresses. The more of the fragmented hormone that is around, the more likely the first antibody will accidentally capture the fragment instead of the intact hormone. However, the signal antibody does not respond to the fragment so it does not change color when that happens, and therefore you get a negative result even though the hormone might be present.

Q: How common is this problem?

It depends on the device. They all use different antibodies, and some are better at discriminating the full hormone from the fragment than others. We looked at 11 of the most commonly used hospital pregnancy tests to see if they were susceptible to false negatives when levels of the hormone fragment were high. Seven were somewhat susceptible, two were highly susceptible, and only two tests were not susceptible. The worst one gave false negatives in 5 percent of the urine samples of pregnant women tested. That was, unfortunately, the test we were using when that initial patient came in. Based on our research, we have switched to a test that does not have this false-negative problem.

Q: Are the makers of pregnancy tests doing anything to solve this problem?

Based on our work, the Food and Drug Administration has acknowledged the need for pregnancy tests that are not susceptible to false negatives. The FDA requires that all new tests generate a positive signal even when concentrations of the fragmented hormone are high. Unfortunately, this requirement does not apply to tests that were already FDA-approved.

Q: What can women do if they think they received a false negative on a pregnancy test?

What’s interesting is that some women discovered our research and have been posting in online pregnancy forums, saying that if you think you’re pregnant but the test comes back negative, dilute the urine with water and try again because sometimes the tests are wrong. And that can actually work. Dilution reduces levels of the hormone fragment enough that the first antibody is more likely to detect the intact hormone again. But I do not recommend this. The best test to detect pregnancy is a blood test. If there’s any doubt, I would recommend women talk to their physicians and request blood tests.

Can a hormonal imbalance cause a negative pregnancy test?

But Ann Gronowski, PhD, a professor of pathology and immunology, and of obstetrics and gynecology, and medical director of core laboratory services at Barnes-Jewish Hospital, discovered that pregnancy tests can also give incorrect results to women five weeks or more into their pregnancies, when hormone levels tend to ...

Can menopause cause false pregnancy?

Sometimes, women who are post-menopausal or going through menopause have high levels of HCG, which could cause a pregnancy test to show as positive even though you wouldn't truly be pregnant.

What factors can cause a false negative pregnancy test?

You might get a false-negative if you:.
Take the test too early. The earlier after a missed period that you take a home pregnancy test, the harder it is for the test to detect HCG . ... .
Check test results too soon. Give the test time to work. ... .
Use diluted urine..

How common is false negative pregnancy test?

Home pregnancy tests are usually accurate, but researchers estimate that up to 5% of tests give a false negative — meaning the test says you aren't pregnant when you actually are. There are a few reasons why you might get a false negative. You might be taking the test too early or after drinking too much water.