Also Included In: Pregnancy / Obstetrics; Women's Health / Gynecology
Article Date: 13 Aug 2012 - 1:00 PDT
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Recommendations For Treating Thyroid Dysfunction During And After Pregnancy
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The Endocrine Society has made revisions to its 2007 Clinical Practice Guideline (CPG) for management of thyroid disease during pregnancy and postpartum. The CPG provides recommendations for diagnosis and treatment of patients with thyroid-related medical issues just before and during pregnancy and in the postpartum interval.
Thyroid hormone contributes critically to normal fetal brain development and having too little or too much of this hormone can impact both mother and fetus. Hypothyroid women are more likely to experience infertility and have an increased prevalence of anemia, gestational hypertension and postpartum hemorrhage. If left untreated, maternal hypothyroidism is associated with premature birth, low birth-weight and neonatal respiratory distress. Higher than normal thyroid hormone levels are associated with increased fetal loss.
"Pregnancy may affect the course of thyroid diseases and conversely, thyroid diseases may affect the course of pregnancy," said Leslie De Groot, M.D., lead researcher from the University of Rhode Island. "Pregnant women may be under the care of multiple health care professionals including obstetricians, nurse midwives, family practitioners and endocrinologists making the development of guidelines all the more critical."
Revisions from the CPG include:
- Caution should be used in the interpretation of serum free thyroxine (T4) levels during pregnancy and each laboratory should establish trimester-specific reference ranges for pregnant women using a free T4 assay. The non-pregnant total T4 range (5-12 μg/dL - 50-150 nmol/L) can be adapted in the second and third trimesters by multiplying this range by 1.5-fold. Alternatively, the free T4 index appears to be a reliable assay during pregnancy;
- Propylthiouracil (PTU), if available, should be the first-line drug for treatment of hyperthyroidism during the first trimester of pregnancy, because of the possible association of methimazole (MMI) with congenital abnormalities. MMI may also be prescribed if PTU is not available or if a patient cannot tolerate or has an adverse response to PTU. Recent analyses by the FDA indicate that PTU may rarely be associated with severe liver toxicity. For this reason, clinicians should change treatment of patients from PTU to MMI after completion of the first trimester;
- Breastfeeding women should maintain a daily intake of 250 μg of iodine to ensure breast-milk provides 100 mcg iodine per day to the infant;
- Once-daily prenatal vitamins should contain 150-200μg iodine and that this be in the form of potassium iodide or iodate, the content of which is verified to insure that all pregnant women taking prenatal vitamins are protected from iodine deficiency;
- Since thyroid receptor antibodies (thyroid receptor stimulating, binding, or inhibiting antibodies) freely cross the placenta and can stimulate or inhibit the fetal thyroid, these antibodies should be measured before 22 weeks gestational age in mothers with 1) current Graves' disease or 2) a history of Graves' disease and treatment with 131-I or thyroidectomy before pregnancy, or 3) a previous neonate with Graves' disease or 4) previously elevated TSH receptor antibodies (TRAb);
- In women with TRAb at least 2-3 fold the normal level, and women treated with anti-thyroid drugs, fetal thyroid dysfunction should be screened for during the fetal anatomy ultrasound (18-22nd weeks) and repeated every 4-6 weeks or as clinically indicated. Evidence of fetal thyroid dysfunction could include thyroid enlargement, growth restriction, hydrops, presence of goiter, advanced bone age, or cardiac failure.
- Women with nodules 5 mm-1cm should be considered for fine needle aspiration (FNA) if they have a high risk history or suspicious findings on ultrasound and women with complex nodules 1.5-2 cm should also receive an FNA. During the last 6 weeks of pregnancy, FNA can reasonably be delayed until after delivery. Ultrasound guided FNA is likely to have an advantage for maximizing adequate sampling.
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Other members of The Endocrine Society task force that developed this CPG include: Marcos Abalovich of Durand Hospital and Favaloro University in Buenos Aires, Argentina; Erik K. Alexander of Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston, MA; Nobuyuki Amino of Kuma Hospital in Kobe, Japan; Linda Barbour of University of Colorado School of Medicine in Auroroa; Rhoda H. Cobin of Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York, NY; Creswell J. Eastman of University of Sydney Medical School in Australia; John H. Lazarus of Cardiff University Medical School and University Hospital of Wales in the United Kingdom; Dominique Luton of Hospital Bichat and Beaujon Assistance Publique-Hospitaux de Paris, Universite´ Paris in France; Susan J. Mandel of University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine in Philadelphia; Jorge Mestman of Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California; Joanne Rovet of the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, Canada; and Scott Sullivan of Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston.
The guideline entitled "Management of Thyroid Dysfunction during Pregnancy and Postpartum: An Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline" appears in the August 2012 issue of the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism (JCEM), a publication of The Endocrine Society.
The Endocrine Society
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n.p. "Recommendations For Treating Thyroid Dysfunction During And After Pregnancy." Medical News Today. MediLexicon, Intl., 13 Aug. 2012. Web.
13 Aug. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/248929.php>
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http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/248929.php.
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'Recommendations For Treating Thyroid Dysfunction During And After Pregnancy'
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