Unit Converter
Free β-subunit of human chorionic gonadotropin (free βhCG)

SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

(Placenta-Derived Glycoprotein – Key Marker in Down Syndrome Screening, Pregnancy Disorders & Tumors)

Synonyms

  • Free β-hCG
  • β-hCG (free beta subunit)
  • Uncombined β-subunit
  • Free beta human chorionic gonadotropin
  • β-core hCG fragment (related)
  • Placental hCG marker

Units of Measurement

  • ng/mL
  • mIU/mL
  • IU/L

Unit Conversions

1 mIU/mL = 1 IU/L
1 ng/mL (free β-hCG) ≠ directly convertible to IU units
Because IU measures biological activity, and ng measures mass.
Conversion varies by assay and manufacturer.

Important:
Clinical labs do not convert between ng/mL ↔ mIU/mL for free β-hCG.
Each unit must be interpreted as reported by the assay.

Description

Free β-hCG is the uncombined beta subunit of the hormone hCG.
It is produced predominantly by:

  • Syncytiotrophoblasts of the placenta
  • Trophoblastic tumors
  • Certain germ cell tumors

Free β-hCG is biologically active and is a more specific marker than total hCG in some conditions.

It is widely used for:

  • First-trimester aneuploidy screening (Down syndrome risk assessment)
  • Early pregnancy evaluation
  • Diagnosis & monitoring of trophoblastic disease
  • Tumor marker in germ cell tumors

Physiological Role

Although total hCG supports:

  • Corpus luteum maintenance
  • Progesterone production
  • Embryo implantation

The free β-subunit has no independent physiologic function, but elevated levels are clinically meaningful.

Clinical Significance

High Free β-hCG

1. Down Syndrome (Trisomy 21)

One of the most important applications.
In the first-trimester combined screen (11–14 weeks):

  • Free β-hCG is elevated
  • NT (nuchal translucency) ↑
  • PAPP-A ↓

Used to calculate MoM (Multiple of Median):

  • Free β-hCG MoM > 2.0 → ↑ risk for Trisomy 21

2. Trophoblastic Diseases

  • Complete molar pregnancy
  • Partial molar pregnancy
  • Persistent gestational trophoblastic disease
  • Choriocarcinoma

Very high free β-hCG values are typical.

3. Germ Cell Tumors

  • Testicular tumors (non-seminomatous)
  • Ovarian germ cell tumors
  • Mediastinal germ cell tumors

Free β-hCG serves as a tumor marker.

4. Normal Pregnancy

Increases rapidly:

  • Peaks around 10–12 weeks
  • Then declines and stabilizes

Free β-hCG values are higher than in non-pregnant states.

Low Free β-hCG

Associated with:

  • Trisomy 18 (Edwards syndrome)
  • Trisomy 13 (Patau syndrome)
  • Potential miscarriage
  • Non-viable pregnancy
  • Ectopic pregnancy (may be lower than expected)

Reference Intervals

(Assay- and gestational-age dependent; MoM values are standard.)

In Pregnancy (First Trimester: 11–14 weeks)

Results reported as:

  • MoM (Multiple of Median)
  • ng/mL or IU/L depending on assay

Typical MoM Ranges

ConditionFree β-hCG MoM
Normal pregnancy0.5 – 2.0 MoM
Down Syndrome (T21)>2.0 MoM
Trisomy 18/13<0.5 MoM

Absolute numeric reference intervals (ng/mL or IU/L) are not clinically standardized due to wide assay variability.

Non-Pregnant Adults

  • Free β-hCG: Undetectable or <1–2 IU/L

Postmenopausal Women

  • May have low detectable levels (<7 IU/L) due to pituitary hCG.

Interpretation Note

Because of assay variability, use:

  • MoM values
  • Gestational age-specific medians

These are standard in prenatal screening.

Diagnostic Uses

1. First-Trimester Aneuploidy Screening

Combined with:

  • Nuchal translucency (NT)
  • PAPP-A
  • Maternal age

Free β-hCG is a critical marker for Down syndrome screening.

2. Diagnosis of Trophoblastic Disease

  • Extremely elevated levels
  • Used to monitor treatment response
  • Detect recurrence of GTD

3. Tumor Marker

For:

  • Testicular cancer
  • Ovarian germ cell tumors
  • Mediastinal germ cell tumors

Trend monitoring is essential.

4. Early Pregnancy Assessment

  • Helps identify abnormal rise in failing pregnancy
  • Lower levels → ectopic or early loss (not diagnostic alone)

Analytical Notes

  • Serum preferred
  • Use same assay for serial measurements
  • Free β-hCG is more specific for Down syndrome than total hCG
  • Biotin supplements can interfere with immunoassays

Clinical Pearls

  • Free β-hCG is elevated in Down syndrome, while PAPP-A is decreased.
  • hCG-related tumors produce disproportionately high free β-hCG.
  • Always interpret pregnancy results using MoM, not raw units.
  • Pituitary hCG can cause low-level false positives in postmenopausal women.
  • Very high free β-hCG in early pregnancy may indicate molar pregnancy.

Interesting Fact

The beta subunit of hCG contains the immunologically unique region that distinguishes hCG from LH - allowing highly specific assays for early pregnancy and tumor detection.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - hCG Variants.
  2. ACOG & SMFM Guidelines - First Trimester Screening.
  3. ISPD (International Society for Prenatal Diagnosis) Standards.
  4. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - Free β-hCG.
  5. ARUP Consult - hCG Interpretation.
  6. MedlinePlus / NIH - hCG Test.

Last updated: January 26, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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