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Triiodothyronine free (FT3)

SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

(Biologically Active Unbound T3 - Sensitive Indicator of Thyroid Hormone Excess & Peripheral Conversion)

Synonyms

  • Free T3
  • FT3
  • Unbound T3
  • Dialyzable T3 (reference method)
  • Non-protein-bound T3

Units of Measurement

  • pmol/L
  • pg/mL
  • pg/dL
  • pg/100 mL
  • pg%
  • ng/dL
  • ng/L

Unit Conversions

Molecular Weight of T3 = 650.97 g/mol

pmol/L ↔ pg/mL

1 pmol/L=0.651 pg/mL1\ \text{pmol/L} = 0.651\ \text{pg/mL}1 pmol/L=0.651 pg/mL 1 pg/mL=1.54 pmol/L1\ \text{pg/mL} = 1.54\ \text{pmol/L}1 pg/mL=1.54 pmol/L

pmol/L ↔ ng/dL

1 ng/dL=15.4 pmol/L1\ \text{ng/dL} = 15.4\ \text{pmol/L}1 ng/dL=15.4 pmol/L 1 pmol/L=0.065 ng/dL1\ \text{pmol/L} = 0.065\ \text{ng/dL}1 pmol/L=0.065 ng/dL

pg/mL ↔ ng/L

1 pg/mL=1 ng/L1\ \text{pg/mL} = 1\ \text{ng/L}1 pg/mL=1 ng/L

pg/dL = pg% = pg/100 mL

(Older volumetric units; equal to one another.)

Description

Free T3 represents the ~0.3% unbound fraction of circulating triiodothyronine that is:

  • Not bound to TBG
  • Not bound to albumin
  • Not bound to prealbumin/transthyretin

Because FT3 reflects the active hormone available to tissues, it is a sensitive marker of:

  • Hyperthyroidism
  • Peripheral conversion of T4 → T3
  • Thyroid hormone resistance

FT3 is less reliable for diagnosing hypothyroidism than FT4, but highly useful for detecting T3-toxicosis.

Physiological Role

FT3 controls:

  • Basal metabolic rate
  • Sympathetic drive
  • Thermogenesis
  • Cardiac output & heart rate
  • Lipid and carbohydrate metabolism
  • Brain and bone development
  • GI motility
  • Mood & cognition

FT3 is 3–4 times more potent than FT4.

Clinical Significance

ELEVATED FT3 (T3-Toxicosis / Hyperthyroidism)

Most common causes

1. Graves’ Disease

Often shows disproportionate rise in FT3 (T3-predominant thyrotoxicosis).

2. Toxic Multinodular Goiter

3. Toxic Adenoma

4. Thyroiditis

5. Excess T3 or Levothyroxine Intake

Intentional or accidental.

6. TSH-Secreting Pituitary Adenoma

High FT3 + high TSH.

7. Thyroid Hormone Resistance

High FT3 + normal/high TSH.

LOW FT3

1. Non-Thyroidal Illness Syndrome

Most common cause of low FT3 worldwide.
Seen in:

  • Sepsis
  • Trauma
  • ICU/critical illness
  • Liver failure
  • Renal failure
  • Malnutrition

2. Hypothyroidism

FT3 often preserved until late stages.

3. Certain Medications

  • Amiodarone
  • Propranolol
  • Steroids
  • Lithium

4. Chronic liver disease

Reduced conversion of T4 → T3.

Reference Intervals

(Tietz 8E + ATA/AACE + Mayo + ARUP)

Free T3

  • 3.0 – 6.0 pmol/L
    (= 2.0 – 4.0 pg/mL)
    (= 0.20 – 0.39 ng/dL)

Clinical Interpretation

  • FT3 > 6.0 pmol/L → hyperthyroidism likely
  • FT3 > 10 pmol/L → marked thyrotoxicosis
  • FT3 < 3.0 pmol/L → low T3 / NTIS / hypothyroidism
  • FT3 < 2.0 pmol/L → severe illness or strong NTIS pattern

Diagnostic Uses

1. Evaluate Hyperthyroidism

Most sensitive marker of thyroid hormone excess.

2. Diagnosis of T3-Toxicosis

High FT3 with normal FT4.

3. NTIS (Non-Thyroidal Illness)

Earliest change → fall in FT3.

4. Monitor Therapy

Useful in patients on combination LT4+LT3 therapy.

5. Thyroid Hormone Resistance

High FT3 with normal or high TSH.

Analytical Notes

  • Best measured by equilibrium dialysis FT3 (gold standard).
  • Routine immunoassays for FT3 are variable and less reliable than FT4.
  • Biotin supplements can cause false high FT3 in many assays.
  • Heparin infusion may artifactually raise FT3 (lipase-driven FFA displacement).
  • Assay interference is more common in FT3 than FT4.

Clinical Pearls

  • In Graves’ disease, FT3 rises more than FT4.
  • Elderly patients may have “normal FT3 hyperthyroidism” (apathetic hyperthyroidism).
  • NTIS → low FT3, normal/low FT4, normal/low TSH - do not treat the thyroid.
  • FT3 is useful when FT4 and TSH are borderline but symptoms suggest thyrotoxicosis.
  • Total T3 sometimes correlates better than FT3 in mild hyperthyroidism due to assay issues.

Interesting Fact

Although FT3 is present at extremely low concentrations (~0.3% of total T3), it mediates nearly all of thyroid hormone metabolic effects, making it the “active currency” of thyroid physiology.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Thyroid Hormones
  2. ATA / AACE Thyroid Dysfunction Guidelines
  3. European Thyroid Association (ETA)
  4. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - FT3
  5. ARUP Consult - Thyroid Function
  6. NIH / MedlinePlus - Triiodothyronine

Last updated: January 27, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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