BLOOD TESTS
Hormone Blood Tests: When They Are Useful
When hormone blood tests add clinical value, why context matters more than a single number, and how results fit into wider care.
Hormone blood tests can be useful, but they are often oversimplified online. Patients frequently arrive having read that they should “get their hormones checked” — but what that means in practice depends entirely on the clinical question. A hormone test without clinical reasoning can produce a result that is technically normal but clinically misleading, or a result that appears abnormal but is expected for the patient’s age, cycle stage, or medication. The real question is whether testing is likely to add clarity to the specific symptoms in front of you.
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When hormone blood tests may be relevant
They may be relevant where there are menopause-related symptoms such as hot flushes, night sweats, sleep disturbance, mood change or vaginal dryness. They can support assessment of significant menstrual changes — irregular cycles, heavy periods, or absent periods — and may be part of some fertility investigations. In men, hormone testing is most commonly requested for suspected low testosterone, particularly when symptoms include reduced libido, erectile difficulty, fatigue, poor concentration, or changes in body composition. Wider endocrine tests such as cortisol, prolactin, DHEA-S or insulin may also be considered in more complex presentations.
Why timing and cycle stage matter
One of the most important — and often overlooked — aspects of hormone testing is timing. In premenopausal women, oestrogen, progesterone, FSH and LH vary significantly through the menstrual cycle. A progesterone level drawn at the wrong point in the cycle may be meaningless. FSH can fluctuate considerably during perimenopause, which is why a single reading often does not confirm or exclude the transition. For testosterone in men, levels are highest in the early morning and decline through the day, so a fasting morning sample is generally preferred for accurate assessment.
Hormonal contraception, HRT, testosterone replacement, thyroid medication and other drugs can all affect results. Your GP should know about these before ordering tests, as they influence both what is measured and how the result is interpreted.
Interpretation
Why context matters
Hormonal results are not always straightforward. A result that sits within the laboratory reference range may still warrant clinical attention if the symptoms are clear. Conversely, a mildly abnormal result may be physiologically normal for the individual. In perimenopause, for example, NICE guidelines state that hormone testing is not routinely required for diagnosis in women over 45 with typical symptoms — the clinical picture carries more weight than the blood result. In suspected male hypogonadism, repeat testing is usually recommended before considering treatment, because a single low reading can reflect temporary factors such as illness, poor sleep or stress.

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Clinical pathway
When hormone tests are most useful
Hormone blood tests add the most value when they are linked to a wider clinical pathway rather than ordered in isolation. At Basuto, hormonal testing usually sits within a women’s health or men’s health consultation where symptoms, medical history, medication and lifestyle factors are all considered alongside the result. This produces a more accurate clinical picture than a stand-alone test and makes it easier to decide whether the next step is treatment, monitoring, further investigation or reassurance.
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