Affiliation:
1. Division of Neonatology, Health Science University , Ankara Bilkent City Hospital , Ankara , Türkiye
Abstract
Abstract
Objectives
Transient hyperthyrotropinemia/transient hypothyroxinaemia and congenital hypothyroidism (CH) have completely different treatment and clinical outcomes. However, a powerful, highly sensitive and cost-effective marker for the differentiation of these clinical entities in the early postnatal period is not available. Therefore, we aimed to test the potential, early predictive, diagnostic power of the thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH)/free thyroxine (fT4) ratio for differentiation of the two clinical entities in the early period of life.
Methods
TSH and fT4 levels were recorded on the postnatal day 7 of premature infants<32 weeks of gestational age. TSH/fT4 ratio was calculated. The significance degree of TSH/fT4 ratio was analyzed for the differentiation of transient hyperthyrotropinemia or transient hypothyroxinaemia and CH.
Results
The study included 1,204 preterm infants<32 weeks of gestational age. Of the 1,204 infants, 978 (81.2 %) had normal thyroid function. Eighty-eight infants (7.3 %) were diagnosed with CH and 138 (11.5 %) with transient hyperthyrotropinemia or transient hypothyroxinemia. Initial TSH/fT4 ratio>4.8 was found to be an early diagnostic warning sign with high power in favor of transient hyperthyrotropinemia or transient hypothyroxinemia (AUC value: 0.947) and TSH/fT4 ratio>12.5 (AUC value: 0.999) was found to be an early diagnostic warning sign with high power in favor of CH (p=0.0001).
Conclusions
We found for the first time that the TSH/fT4 ratio can be used for the early differentiation of transient hyperthyrotropinemia/transient hypothyroxinaemia and CH in preterm infants without additional cost and with high power.
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