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Also reported in: IU/L
Your hCG is in the normal range for a non-pregnant individual, consistent with no pregnancy and no detectable germ cell tumor marker production.
Your serum hCG is undetectable. In non-pregnant individuals, hCG should be at or below the level of detection. This is the ideal result for cancer screening purposes.
No action needed.
Serum hCG undetectable — no detectable human chorionic gonadotropinYour hCG is within the normal range for a non-pregnant individual. This is a reassuring result for testicular and germ cell tumor surveillance.
No action needed. Continue standard health monitoring.
Serum hCG within normal reference range for non-pregnant individualYour hCG is very low, consistent with a normal non-pregnant state and no germ cell tumor production of this hormone.
No action needed.
Serum hCG: very low — consistent with normal non-pregnant stateYour hCG is in the normal range for a non-pregnant individual, consistent with no pregnancy and no detectable germ cell tumor marker production.
No specific action required.
Serum hCG within reference range — acceptable for non-pregnant individualYour hCG is in the optimal range, reflecting minimal hCG production consistent with a healthy non-pregnant baseline.
No action needed.
Serum hCG: optimal — minimal hCG productionYour hCG is above the reference range for a non-pregnant individual. This can indicate germ cell tumor (testicular, ovarian, or extragonadal), pituitary hCG production in peri/postmenopausal women, marijuana use, or heterophile antibody interference. In a reproductive-age woman, pregnancy must first be confirmed or excluded.
Discuss with your doctor. Pregnancy test, testicular ultrasound (in men), and pelvic imaging (in women) should be considered. Repeat testing to confirm elevation.
Serum hCG 5–20 mIU/mL — borderline elevated in non-pregnant individual; investigation requiredYour hCG is significantly elevated for a non-pregnant individual. This raises concern for a germ cell tumor such as testicular cancer, ovarian germ cell tumor, or choriocarcinoma. It can also be seen in some gestational trophoblastic diseases.
Seek prompt specialist evaluation. Testicular ultrasound, pelvic imaging, and specialist oncology or urology consultation are needed. Do not delay.
Serum hCG >20 mIU/mL — elevated in non-pregnant individual; germ cell tumor concernYour hCG is critically elevated in a non-pregnant individual. This level is strongly associated with active germ cell malignancy (testicular cancer, choriocarcinoma, or gestational trophoblastic neoplasia). This requires urgent oncological evaluation.
Seek urgent specialist oncology evaluation immediately. Comprehensive imaging and biopsy planning should be initiated without delay.
Serum hCG >100 mIU/mL — critically elevated; active germ cell tumor or trophoblastic disease highly likelyUpload your lab report and get your actual values interpreted in plain English — instantly, with no medical training required.