Hormone Therapy Safety - Advanced Female Lab Panel
The Hormone Therapy Safety Advanced Female Lab Panel supports women using or considering hormone therapy, including estrogen, progesterone, testosterone, DHEA, pellets, creams, patches, injections, or other hormone-support products. It evaluates reproductive hormones, androgen balance, thyroid function, thyroid antibodies, blood counts, liver and kidney markers, lipids, blood sugar, inflammation, iron status, vitamin D, B12, folate, magnesium, and urine health.
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The following is a list of what is included in the item above. Click the test(s) below to view what biomarkers are measured along with an explanation of what the biomarker is measuring.
Also known as: CBC, CBC includes Differential and Platelets, CBC/PLT w/DIFF, Complete Blood Count (includes Differential and Platelets)
NOTE: Ulta Lab Tests provides CBC test results from Quest Diagnostics as they are reported. Often, different biomarker results are made available at different time intervals. When reporting the results, Ulta Lab Tests denotes those biomarkers not yet reported as 'pending' for every biomarker the test might report. Only biomarkers Quest Diagnostics observes are incorporated and represented in the final CBC test results provided by Ulta Lab Tests.
Absolute Band Neutrophils (Only Reported If Detected)
Absolute Basophils
Absolute Blasts (Only Reported If Detected)
Absolute Eosinophils
Absolute Lymphocytes
Absolute Metamyelocytes (Only Reported If Detected)
Absolute Monocytes
Absolute Myelocytes (Only Reported If Detected)
Absolute Neutrophils
Absolute Nucleated Rbc (Only Reported If Detected)
Absolute Promyelocytes (Only Reported If Detected)
Band Neutrophils (Only Reported If Detected)
Basophils
Blasts (Only Reported If Detected)
Eosinophils
Hematocrit
Hemoglobin
Lymphocytes
MCH
MCHC
MCV
Metamyelocytes (Only Reported If Detected)
Monocytes
MPV
Myelocytes (Only Reported If Detected)
Neutrophils
Nucleated Rbc (Only Reported If Detected)
Platelet Count
Promyelocytes (Only Reported If Detected)
RDW
Reactive Lymphocytes (Only Reported If Detected)
Red Blood Cell Count
White Blood Cell Count
Also known as: Chem 12, Chemistry Panel, Chemistry Screen, CMP, Complete Metabolic Panel, Comprehensive Metabolic Panel CMP, SMA 12, SMA 20
Albumin
Albumin/Globulin Ratio
Alkaline Phosphatase
Alt
AST
Bilirubin, Total
Bun/Creatinine Ratio
Calcium
Carbon Dioxide
Chloride
Creatinine
Egfr African American
Egfr Non-Afr. American
GFR-AFRICAN AMERICAN
GFR-NON AFRICAN AMERICAN
Globulin
Glucose
Potassium
Protein, Total
Sodium
Urea Nitrogen (Bun)
Also known as: Dehydroepiandrosterone Sulfate, DHEA SO4, DHEA Sulfate Immunoassay, DHEAS, Transdehydroandrosterone
DHEA SULFATE
Estradiol
Ferritin
Also known as: Follicle Stimulating Hormone (FSH) and Luteinizing Hormone (LH), Follicle Stimulating Hormone and Luteinizing Hormone
Fsh
Lh
Also known as: A1c, Glycated Hemoglobin, Glycohemoglobin, Glycosylated Hemoglobin, HA1c, HbA1c, Hemoglobin A1c, Hemoglobin A1c HgbA1C, Hgb A1c
HEMOGLOBIN A1C
Also known as: C-Reactive Protein, Cardio CRP, Cardio hs-CRP, CRP, High Sensitivity CRP, High-sensitivity C-reactive Protein, High-sensitivity CRP, Highly Sensitive CRP, hsCRP, Ultra-sensitive CRP
Hs Crp
Also known as: Iron and TIBC, Iron and Total Iron Binding Capacity TIBC, TIBC
% Saturation
Iron Binding Capacity
Iron, Total
Also known as: Cholesterol, HDL,Fasting Lipids,Cholesterol, LDL, Fasting Lipids, Lipid Panel (fasting), Lipid Profile (fasting), Lipids
Chol/HDLC Ratio
Cholesterol, Total
HDL Cholesterol
LDL-Cholesterol
Non HDL Cholesterol
Triglycerides
Magnesium
Also known as: Progesterone Immunoassay
Progesterone
Also known as: PRL
Prolactin
Vitamin D, 25-Oh, D2
Vitamin D, 25-Oh, D3
Vitamin D, 25-Oh, Total
Also known as: Free T4, FT4, T4 Free
T4, Free
Also known as: Testosterone Total And Free And Sex Hormone Binding Globulin
Free Testosterone
Sex Hormone Binding
TESTOSTERONE, TOTAL,
Thyroglobulin Antibodies
Thyroid Peroxidase
Also known as: Thyroid Stimulating Hormone Test, Thyrotropin Test
TSH
Also known as: UA, Complete, Urinalysis UA Complete, Urine Analysis, Complete
Amorphous Sediment (Only Reported If Detected)
Appearance
Bacteria
Bilirubin
Calcium Oxalate Crystals (Only Reported If Detected)
Casts (Only Reported If Detected)
Color
Crystals (Only Reported If Detected)
Glucose
Granular Cast (Only Reported If Detected)
Hyaline Cast
Ketones
Leukocyte Esterase
Nitrite
Occult Blood
Ph
Protein
Rbc
Reducing Substances (Only Reported If Detected)
Renal Epithelial Cells (Only Reported If Detected)
Specific Gravity
Squamous Epithelial Cells
Transitional Epithelial (Only Reported If Detected)
Triple Phosphate Crystals (Only Reported If Detected)
Uric Acid Crystals (Only Reported If Detected)
WBC
YEAST (Only Reported If Detected)
Also known as: Cobalamin, Folic Acid, Vitamin B 12, Vitamin B 12 and Folic Acid, Vitamin B12 Cobalamin and Folate Panel Serum, Vitamin B12/Folic Acid
Folate, Serum
Vitamin B12
The Hormone Therapy Safety - Advanced Female Lab Panel panel contains 20 tests with 112 biomarkers .
Overview
The Hormone Therapy Safety Advanced Female Lab Panel is designed for women who want a deeper lab-based review while using, considering, or monitoring hormone therapy. This may include estrogen therapy, progesterone therapy, testosterone therapy, DHEA supplementation, hormone pellets, creams, patches, injections, compounded hormones, or other hormone-support products.
Hormone therapy can influence multiple body systems, including reproductive hormone balance, androgen activity, thyroid function, liver processing, blood counts, cholesterol patterns, blood sugar, inflammation, iron status, energy, mood, sleep, bone health, and general wellness. This panel brings together hormone markers and safety-support labs that may help guide a more informed discussion with a licensed healthcare provider.
This panel does not prove that hormone therapy is safe or unsafe by itself. Results should be interpreted with symptoms, age, menstrual status, menopause status, cycle timing, medication list, hormone type, dose, route of administration, duration of use, personal medical history, family history, and provider guidance.
Why Order This Panel?
The Hormone Therapy Safety Advanced Female Lab Panel may be helpful for women who want to monitor hormone levels and related safety markers while using hormone therapy or hormone-support products.
This panel may help provide insight into:
- Estradiol and progesterone patterns
- FSH and LH hormone-axis signaling
- Testosterone availability and SHBG
- DHEA-S adrenal androgen context
- Prolactin and pituitary hormone patterns
- Thyroid function and autoimmune thyroid markers
- Blood count and platelet patterns
- Liver, kidney, glucose, electrolyte, calcium, albumin, and protein markers
- Cholesterol and triglyceride patterns
- Blood sugar and A1c
- Low-grade inflammation
- Iron storage and iron availability
- Magnesium, vitamin D, vitamin B12, and folate status
- Urine health and hydration-related findings
This Panel May Be Helpful For Women Who Use
- Estrogen therapy
- Progesterone therapy
- Testosterone therapy
- DHEA supplements
- Hormone pellets
- Hormone creams, gels, patches, injections, or oral hormones
- Compounded hormone products
- Bioidentical hormone therapy
- Perimenopause or menopause hormone support
- Hormone therapy combined with thyroid medication
- Hormone therapy combined with supplements or wellness products
Common Symptoms or Situations This Panel May Help Evaluate
This panel may be useful for women with or concerned about:
- Hot flashes or night sweats
- Irregular periods or cycle changes
- Perimenopause or menopause symptoms
- Low libido
- Mood changes or irritability
- Fatigue or low energy
- Poor sleep
- Weight changes or body composition concerns
- Acne, oily skin, or unwanted hair growth
- Hair thinning
- Breast tenderness
- Heavy bleeding or low iron concerns
- Thyroid symptoms
- High cholesterol or metabolic risk
- Hormone dose changes
- Desire for a deeper hormone therapy safety baseline
What This Panel Helps Evaluate
This panel helps evaluate selected biomarkers related to:
- Female hormone therapy monitoring
- Estradiol and progesterone status
- Pituitary-ovarian signaling
- Androgen balance
- Testosterone availability
- DHEA-S adrenal hormone context
- Prolactin patterns
- Thyroid function and thyroid autoimmunity
- Liver and kidney function
- Blood count and platelet patterns
- Cholesterol and metabolic wellness
- Blood sugar and A1c
- Inflammation
- Iron status
- Vitamin and mineral support
- Urine health
Tests Included and Why They Matter
Female Reproductive Hormones & Hormone Therapy Context
This group evaluates the primary hormone markers often reviewed when women are using or considering hormone therapy. These markers can help provide context for symptom patterns, dosing discussions, cycle status, perimenopause, menopause, and provider-guided hormone monitoring.
Estradiol
Estradiol is a major form of estrogen. It is included because estradiol is commonly reviewed in women using estrogen therapy, hormone replacement therapy, compounded hormones, patches, creams, pellets, or injections.
Estradiol may provide context for hot flashes, night sweats, sleep, mood, vaginal dryness, libido, bone health, breast tenderness, and overall estrogen balance. Estradiol results should be interpreted with menstrual status, cycle timing, symptoms, hormone route, dose, and provider guidance.
Progesterone, Immunoassay
Progesterone is a reproductive hormone involved in menstrual cycle regulation, ovulation-related patterns, uterine lining support, and hormone balance. It is included because progesterone may be used in hormone therapy regimens and is often reviewed with estrogen status.
Progesterone may provide context for sleep, mood, cycle patterns, bleeding patterns, breast tenderness, perimenopause symptoms, and luteal phase hormone support. Timing matters because progesterone levels can vary significantly across the menstrual cycle.
FSH and LH
FSH and LH are pituitary hormones that help regulate ovarian function. They are included because they may provide context for ovarian signaling, perimenopause, menopause transition, cycle changes, and reproductive hormone feedback patterns.
In women using hormone therapy, FSH and LH may be affected by hormone dosing and route. These markers should be reviewed with symptoms, age, cycle history, hormone use, and provider guidance.
Androgen Balance, Libido & Hormone Availability
This group evaluates androgen-related markers that may be important in women using testosterone, DHEA, or hormone-support products. Androgens may influence libido, energy, mood, muscle, skin, hair, and body composition, but levels should be interpreted carefully to avoid over- or under-treatment.
Testosterone, Total and Free and Sex Hormone Binding Globulin
This test evaluates total testosterone, free testosterone, and SHBG. It is included because testosterone availability may provide useful context for women using testosterone therapy, hormone pellets, DHEA, or androgen-support products.
Testosterone patterns may relate to libido, energy, mood, muscle mass, body composition, acne, oily skin, unwanted hair growth, or hair thinning. SHBG helps interpret how much testosterone is available for use by the body, which is important because total testosterone alone may not fully explain symptoms.
DHEA Sulfate, Immunoassay
DHEA-S is an adrenal androgen marker. It is included because some women take DHEA supplements or use hormone therapy that may affect androgen pathways.
DHEA-S may provide context for energy, libido, mood, stress physiology, androgen balance, acne, hair changes, and overall hormone support. It should be interpreted with testosterone, estradiol, symptoms, supplement use, and provider guidance.
Pituitary Hormone & Hormone-Axis Support
This group helps evaluate pituitary-related hormone signaling that may affect menstrual patterns, libido, breast symptoms, and reproductive hormone balance.
Prolactin
Prolactin is a pituitary hormone involved in reproductive and breast physiology. It is included because abnormal prolactin patterns may overlap with irregular cycles, missed periods, breast discharge, low libido, mood changes, or reproductive hormone changes.
Prolactin may be influenced by stress, sleep, exercise, medications, pregnancy, breastfeeding, and timing of collection. It should be reviewed with symptoms and provider guidance.
Thyroid Function & Autoimmune Thyroid Patterns
Thyroid function can overlap with hormone therapy symptoms. Fatigue, weight changes, mood shifts, hair changes, cold or heat intolerance, bowel changes, and cycle changes may be related to thyroid function, sex hormones, or both. This group provides thyroid function and thyroid autoimmunity context.
TSH
TSH is a key thyroid screening marker. It is included because thyroid function may influence energy, metabolism, body temperature, mood, weight, hair, skin, bowel patterns, menstrual cycle patterns, and hormone therapy response.
TSH is useful as a starting point when symptoms overlap between thyroid imbalance, perimenopause, menopause, or hormone therapy effects.
T4, Free
Free T4 measures the available form of thyroxine, a thyroid hormone. It is included because Free T4 provides additional thyroid hormone production context when reviewed with TSH and symptoms.
Free T4 may be especially useful for women taking thyroid medication or experiencing fatigue, weight changes, cold intolerance, constipation, hair changes, or other thyroid-related symptoms.
Thyroid Peroxidase and Thyroglobulin Antibodies
These antibodies help evaluate autoimmune thyroid patterns. They are included because autoimmune thyroid activity may contribute to thyroid dysfunction and symptoms that overlap with hormone therapy concerns.
Including thyroid antibodies helps provide deeper context for women with thyroid symptoms, family history of thyroid disease, abnormal thyroid results, fatigue, hair loss, weight changes, or mood changes.
Blood Health, Iron Status & Fatigue Support
Hormone therapy and reproductive hormone patterns can overlap with bleeding patterns, iron status, fatigue, and blood count changes. This group helps evaluate anemia-related patterns, iron stores, inflammation-related ferritin changes, and general blood health.
CBC, includes Differential and Platelets
The CBC evaluates red blood cells, white blood cells, hemoglobin, hematocrit, platelets, and white blood cell types. It is included because blood count patterns may provide context for anemia, infection clues, immune activity, platelet changes, inflammation, fatigue, and overall wellness.
For women using hormone therapy, CBC may be useful when symptoms include fatigue, heavy bleeding, irregular bleeding, low energy, or general wellness concerns.
Ferritin
Ferritin measures stored iron. It is included because iron stores may be relevant to fatigue, hair shedding, heavy periods, low stamina, dizziness, and anemia-related concerns.
Ferritin can be low with iron deficiency or elevated with inflammation, liver stress, or metabolic issues. It should be interpreted with iron/TIBC, CBC, hs-CRP, symptoms, menstrual history, and health history.
Iron and Total Iron Binding Capacity, TIBC
Iron and TIBC help evaluate circulating iron and iron transport capacity. It is included because iron availability is important for oxygen delivery, energy, stamina, and anemia-related interpretation.
This test is especially useful when reviewing fatigue, heavy menstrual bleeding, low ferritin, hair shedding, restless legs, weakness, or low exercise tolerance.
Liver, Kidney, Urine & General Safety Markers
Hormone therapy may be taken in different forms, including oral, topical, injectable, pellet, and compounded products. General organ-function markers can help provide safety context when reviewing medications, supplements, metabolism, and overall wellness.
Comprehensive Metabolic Panel, CMP
The CMP evaluates glucose, liver function, kidney function, electrolytes, calcium, albumin, total protein, and metabolic markers. It is included because hormone therapy safety review benefits from a broad organ-function baseline.
CMP results can provide context for liver enzymes, kidney markers, glucose, electrolytes, calcium balance, hydration, albumin, and protein status.
Urinalysis, UA, Complete
A complete urinalysis evaluates urine markers such as protein, blood, glucose, ketones, specific gravity, pH, and other findings.
It is included because urine findings may provide context for kidney health, hydration, urinary patterns, glucose handling, and general wellness. It can also be useful when reviewing metabolic health or medication/supplement use.
Cardiometabolic, Blood Sugar & Inflammation Support
Hormone therapy can overlap with cholesterol, inflammation, weight, blood sugar, and cardiometabolic wellness discussions. This group helps evaluate metabolic health and cardiovascular risk context.
Hemoglobin A1c
Hemoglobin A1c measures average blood sugar over approximately the past two to three months. It is included because blood sugar patterns may provide context for metabolic wellness, insulin resistance, weight changes, energy, and long-term cardiometabolic risk.
This marker is useful when hormone therapy is being reviewed alongside weight changes, fatigue, cravings, metabolic syndrome, or diabetes risk.
Lipid Panel
The Lipid Panel measures total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, and triglycerides. It is included because hormone therapy, thyroid function, menopause status, weight changes, diet, and genetics may all affect lipid patterns.
This test provides important cardiovascular and metabolic context for women using hormone therapy.
hs-CRP
High-sensitivity C-reactive protein is a marker of low-grade inflammation. It is included because inflammation may provide context for cardiometabolic risk, hormone-related symptoms, ferritin interpretation, liver/metabolic patterns, and general wellness.
hs-CRP is nonspecific and should be interpreted with symptoms, medical history, medications, body composition, and other lab findings.
Nutrient, Bone & Nervous System Support
Hormone therapy is often used in the context of menopause, bone health, energy, mood, sleep, and aging wellness. Nutrient markers can provide additional support for interpreting symptoms and optimizing safety discussions.
QuestAssureD™ 25-Hydroxyvitamin D, D2, D3, LC/MS/MS
Vitamin D testing measures vitamin D status. It is included because vitamin D supports bone health, immune function, muscle function, inflammation balance, calcium balance, and general wellness.
Vitamin D is especially relevant for women reviewing hormone therapy in the context of bone health, menopause, fatigue, muscle symptoms, or low sun exposure.
Vitamin B12 and Folate Panel, Serum
This panel measures vitamin B12 and folate. These nutrients support red blood cell production, nerve function, DNA synthesis, methylation, and general wellness.
This test is included because B12 and folate may provide context for fatigue, brain fog, mood concerns, numbness or tingling, anemia-related patterns, and overall nutrient support.
Magnesium
Magnesium supports muscle function, nerve signaling, sleep, glucose metabolism, blood pressure regulation, and energy production.
It is included because magnesium may provide context for muscle cramps, sleep quality, mood, fatigue, blood pressure, metabolic wellness, and supplement use during hormone therapy.
Related Biomarker Patterns This Panel May Help Identify
This panel may help identify or rule out lab patterns related to:
- Estradiol and progesterone status
- Perimenopause or menopause hormone patterns
- Testosterone availability
- DHEA-S and adrenal androgen patterns
- FSH and LH signaling
- Prolactin patterns
- Thyroid function changes
- Autoimmune thyroid patterns
- Blood count abnormalities
- Iron deficiency or iron overload patterns
- Liver or kidney marker changes
- Urinalysis abnormalities
- Blood sugar imbalance
- Lipid pattern changes
- Low-grade inflammation
- Vitamin D status
- B12 or folate status
- Magnesium status
- General hormone therapy safety concerns
Professional Safety and Interpretation Notice
This panel is designed to support hormone therapy safety review. It does not prove that hormone therapy is safe or unsafe by itself. Results should be interpreted with a licensed healthcare provider and reviewed alongside symptoms, hormone type, dose, route, duration, menstrual status, menopause status, medications, supplements, personal health history, and family history.
Do not stop or change any prescribed hormone therapy or medication without guidance from your healthcare provider.
Additional Panels to Consider
Customers interested in the Hormone Therapy Safety Advanced Female Lab Panel may also consider:
- Hormone Therapy Safety Essential Female Lab Panel
- Hormone Therapy Safety Advanced Male Lab Panel
- Women’s Hormone Balance & Perimenopause Lab Panel
- Thyroid & Metabolism Lab Panel
- Medication & Supplement Safety Lab Panel
- Heart Health & Cholesterol Lab Panel
- Vitamin, Mineral & Nutrient Deficiency Lab Panel
- Stress, Cortisol, Sleep & Burnout Lab Panel
- Hair Loss, Skin Health & Nutrient Lab Panel
- Longevity & Healthy Aging Lab Panel
How to Prepare for This Panel
Preparation may vary depending on the specific tests included and instructions provided with your order. In general:
- Morning collection may be preferred for some hormone markers.
- Timing may matter for estradiol, progesterone, FSH, LH, and testosterone, especially in cycling women.
- Fasting may be recommended because glucose and lipid markers are included.
- Bring or keep a complete list of hormone products, including dose, route, schedule, brand, and how long you have used them.
- Include prescription hormones, compounded hormones, pellets, creams, patches, injections, oral products, DHEA, testosterone, and supplements.
- Do not stop hormone therapy or prescribed medications unless your healthcare provider tells you to.
- Follow all lab collection instructions provided with your order.
What Happens After You Receive Your Results?
After your results are available, your biomarkers can help organize hormone therapy findings into areas such as estrogen status, progesterone status, testosterone availability, adrenal androgen patterns, pituitary signaling, thyroid function, thyroid autoimmunity, blood health, iron status, cardiometabolic wellness, inflammation, vitamin status, magnesium status, liver and kidney function, and urine health.
During the physician consultation, you can discuss whether your results suggest the need for follow-up testing, dose review, timing review, medication review, lifestyle changes, or additional monitoring based on your symptoms, hormone therapy plan, and health history.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Hormone Therapy Safety Advanced Female Lab Panel?
The Hormone Therapy Safety Advanced Female Lab Panel is a blood and urine lab panel that evaluates selected biomarkers related to female hormone therapy monitoring, including estradiol, progesterone, testosterone, DHEA-S, FSH, LH, prolactin, thyroid markers, blood health, iron status, lipids, blood sugar, inflammation, vitamin D, B12, folate, magnesium, liver function, kidney function, and urine health.
Who may benefit from this panel?
This panel may be useful for women using or considering estrogen, progesterone, testosterone, DHEA, hormone pellets, hormone creams, patches, injections, compounded hormones, or other hormone-support products.
Does this panel prove hormone therapy is safe?
No. No lab panel can prove hormone therapy is safe in every situation. This panel helps evaluate selected safety and monitoring markers that may be useful to review with a licensed healthcare provider.
Why are cholesterol and A1c included?
Cholesterol and A1c are included because hormone therapy, menopause status, thyroid function, weight changes, diet, and genetics may all affect cardiometabolic wellness.
Why are thyroid markers included?
Thyroid symptoms can overlap with hormone therapy symptoms, including fatigue, weight changes, mood changes, hair changes, and temperature sensitivity. Thyroid markers help provide context.
Why are testosterone and DHEA-S included for women?
Testosterone and DHEA-S may provide context for libido, energy, mood, body composition, acne, hair growth, hair thinning, and androgen balance in women using hormone-support therapies.
Important Note
This panel is designed to help evaluate selected biomarkers that may be related to female hormone therapy safety, hormone balance, thyroid function, blood health, iron status, metabolic wellness, inflammation, nutrient status, liver function, kidney function, and urine health. It is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease by itself. Results should be reviewed with a licensed healthcare provider.