women looking with expectation at a pregnancy stick realizing it was a false positive

At home urine pregnancy tests are the most convenient and widely used tool to find out if you are pregnant. They work by detecting human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG), which is a hormone produced during early pregnancy.

Unfortunately, you may occasionally receive a false positive pregnancy test result. This can be both misleading and confusing. Here, we would like to share with you 5 common causes to help you feel more confident when interpreting your test results.

1. Evaporation Lines

If a pregnancy test is left out for longer than the recommended read time, there may be a slight test (T) line discoloration called an “evaporation line”, which resembles a positive pregnancy test. It is critical for users to follow the instructions exactly while taking the test. Take Easy@Home pregnancy tests as an example, it is recommended to read your result in 5 minutes for an optimal accuracy rate. 

2. Chemical Pregnancy

chemical pregnancy occurs if a fertilized egg, known as the embryo, is unable to implant or grow. This can happen for a wide range of reasons, such as chromosomal abnormalities, fibroids, scar tissue, low progesterone, or a congenital uterine anomaly that causes an irregularly shaped uterus.

3. Recent Miscarriage or Abortion

After an abortion or miscarriage, the level of hCG starts to decrease, but very slowly. Typically, hCG declines over a period ranging anywhere from 9 to 35 days. The average time frame is around 19 days. Taking a pregnancy test within that period can result in a false-positive test.

4. Medications

If you’re undergoing fertility treatment, your doctor may prescribe a synthetic hCG trigger shot under brand names like Novarel, Pregnyl, Pergonal, Ovidrel, or Profasi, which helps follicles release mature eggs.  Unfortunately, these can also lead to a false positive result.

Other medications that can cause a pregnancy test false positive result include, but are not limited to:

  • Anti-anxiety medications, like diazepam (Valium) or alprazolam (Xanax)
  • Antipsychotics, such as clozapine or chlorpromazine
  • Antihistamines, including promethazine
  • Anticonvulsants, like phenobarbital or other barbiturates
  • Parkinson’s disease medications, including bromocriptine (Parlodel)
  • Diuretics, like furosemide (Lasix, Diuscreen)
  • Methadone (Dolophine)
Learn more about your body with a Premom app

5. Medical Conditions

Certain medical conditions can cause a woman’s hCG level to increase and trigger a positive result while she is not pregnant. These include, but are not limited to:

  • Disorders affecting the pituitary gland and hormone levels, specifically in perimenopausal women
  • Gestational trophoblastic diseases, which cause tumors in the cells that would normally make up the placenta
  • Ovarian cysts, particularly corpus luteum cysts
  • Ectopic pregnancy
  • Phantom hCG, where antibodies interfere with the testing kit
  • Sulfated hCG, most commonly seen in perimenopause 
  • Urinary tract infections
  • In very rare case, cancers of the bladder, cervix, colorectal region, endometrium, lungs, ovaries, pancreas, kidneys, liver, breasts, and stomach

You may wonder how to distinguish a false positive from a true one. It is easier than you’d think. Keep taking tests every few days. If the test(T) line gets darker, then you are likely seeing the doubling of the hCG hormone level, which occurs with early pregnancy.  If not, you may be getting a pregnancy test false positive.

Next Steps

A positive at-home pregnancy test result should always be followed up with a doctor’s appointment. Your doctor may order a blood or urine test to confirm the results and monitor your hCG levels. If you’ve received a false positive, your doctor’s visit will determine that, too.

Some early pregnancy and implantation symptoms may also be good indicators for you to tell if you are really pregnant. These signs of implantation could be also a great information for your medical service provider to make an accurate diagnosis of your condition.

Remember that false positives do happen but they are not a sign you’ll never get pregnant. Have faith and keep testing!

By Heidi Tian Medically Reviewed by Nurse Heather Frame, BSN, RN

References

Hammond, Charles B. MD. False Positive hCG. Obstetrics & Gynecology 98(5 Part 1):p 719-720, November 2001.

Kennedy CE, Yeh PT, Gholbzouri K, Narasimhan M. Self-testing for pregnancy: a systematic review and meta-analysis. BMJ Open. 2022;12(2):e054120. Published 2022 Feb 28. doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2021-054120

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