PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Urinary and salivary endocrine measurements to complement Tanner staging in studies of pubertal development.

  • Mandy Goldberg,
  • Anna J Ciesielski Jones,
  • John A McGrath,
  • Christie Barker-Cummings,
  • Deborah S Cousins,
  • Lauren M Kipling,
  • Juliana W Meadows,
  • James S Kesner,
  • Michele Marcus,
  • Carolyn Monteilh,
  • Dale P Sandler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0251598
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 5
p. e0251598

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundMany studies investigating pubertal development use Tanner staging to assess maturation. Endocrine markers in urine and saliva may provide an objective, sensitive, and non-invasive method for assessing development.ObjectiveOur objective was to examine whether changes in endocrine levels can indicate the onset of pubertal development prior to changes in self-rated Tanner stage.MethodsThirty-five girls and 42 boys aged 7 to 15 years were enrolled in the Growth and Puberty (GAP) study, a longitudinal pilot study conducted from 2007-2009 involving children of women enrolled in the Agricultural Health Study (AHS) in Iowa. We collected saliva and urine samples and assessed pubertal development by self-rated Tanner staging (pubic hair, breast development (girls), genital development (boys)) at three visits over six months. We measured dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) in saliva and creatinine-adjusted luteinizing hormone (LH), testosterone, follicle stimulating hormone (FSH), estrone 3-glucuronide (E13G) and pregnanediol 3-glucuronide (Pd3G) concentrations in first morning urine. We evaluated the relationships over time between Tanner stage and each biomarker using repeated measures analysis.ResultsAmong girls still reporting Tanner breast stage 1 at the final visit, FSH levels increased over the 6-month follow-up period and were no longer lower than higher stage girls at the end of follow-up. We observed a similar pattern for testosterone in boys. By visit 3, boys still reporting Tanner genital stage 1 or pubic hair stage 1 had attained DHEA levels that were comparable to those among boys reporting Tanner stages 2 or 3.ConclusionsIncreasing concentrations of FSH in girls and DHEA and testosterone in boys over a 6-month period revealed the start of the pubertal process prior to changes in self-rated Tanner stage. Repeated, non-invasive endocrine measures may complement the more subjective assessment of physical markers in studies determining pubertal onset.