Total T4 rise in pregnancy: a relook?

Abstract Background Total T4 (TT4) measurement is preferred to free T4 (FT4) especially in last part of pregnancy. Guidelines by American Thyroid Association, European Thyroid Association and Endocrine Society state that TT4 increases 1.5 times pre-pregnant levels after week 16 of pregnancy. However...

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Main Authors: Subhodip Pramanik, Pradip Mukhopadhyay, Sujoy Ghosh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-07-01
Series:Thyroid Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13044-020-00088-5
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spelling doaj-418b108d4d25488bb74575716e306c252020-11-25T03:35:34ZengBMCThyroid Research1756-66142020-07-011311310.1186/s13044-020-00088-5Total T4 rise in pregnancy: a relook?Subhodip Pramanik0Pradip Mukhopadhyay1Sujoy Ghosh2Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism, I.P.G.M.E&RDepartment of Endocrinology and Metabolism, I.P.G.M.E&RDepartment of Endocrinology and Metabolism, I.P.G.M.E&RAbstract Background Total T4 (TT4) measurement is preferred to free T4 (FT4) especially in last part of pregnancy. Guidelines by American Thyroid Association, European Thyroid Association and Endocrine Society state that TT4 increases 1.5 times pre-pregnant levels after week 16 of pregnancy. However, this is based on a small study conducted 40 years ago which used radioimmunoassay for determination in changes in TT4. Materials and methods A cross-sectional study was undertaken to find reference interval for thyroid function in different trimester of pregnancy with special reference to look at the degree of elevation of TT4 as compared to non-pregnant women. Two hundred non-pregnant women (excluding oral contraceptive users) and 600 pregnant women (200 from each trimester) aged 18–40 years were consecutively recruited starting from around 6th week of pregnancy having confirmed singleton pregnancy diagnosed at 8th week by ultrasound. The exclusion criteria included: (1) a personal or family history of thyroid disease; (2) presence of goiter or nodule confirmed by ultrasound; (3) anti-TPO antibody positive state (titre > 35 IU/ml). All subjects were tested for urinary spot iodine concentration and those with UIC < 150 μg/L were excluded. Finally, thyroid function tests (TSH, FT4, TT4, TT3) of 168 non-pregnant women and 163, 153 and 148 women at 1st, 2nd and 3rd trimester respectively were analysed.. Results Total T4 (mean ± SD, μg/dl) in non pregnant women and in different trimesters was 8.95 ± 1.71, 9.71 ± 2.39, 12.11 ± 1.55, 11.83 ± 1.49 respectively. Rise in TT4 occurred between 10-18th week. The mean TT4 in second trimester increased by 25% as compared with the value at 6-9th week and by 35% as compared to non-pregnant value. Conclusion Rise in total T4 in second trimester pregnancy is only around 25% as compared to first trimester value and 35% than the non-pregnant value. Hence multiplying non-pregnant T4 value by 1.5 may actually over-diagnose maternal hypothroxinemia and lead to inappropriate diagnosis and treatment of isolated maternal hypothyroxinemia in a significant proportion of subjects.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13044-020-00088-5Thyroid function testsPregnancyReference rangeTotal T4
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Subhodip Pramanik
Pradip Mukhopadhyay
Sujoy Ghosh
spellingShingle Subhodip Pramanik
Pradip Mukhopadhyay
Sujoy Ghosh
Total T4 rise in pregnancy: a relook?
Thyroid Research
Thyroid function tests
Pregnancy
Reference range
Total T4
author_facet Subhodip Pramanik
Pradip Mukhopadhyay
Sujoy Ghosh
author_sort Subhodip Pramanik
title Total T4 rise in pregnancy: a relook?
title_short Total T4 rise in pregnancy: a relook?
title_full Total T4 rise in pregnancy: a relook?
title_fullStr Total T4 rise in pregnancy: a relook?
title_full_unstemmed Total T4 rise in pregnancy: a relook?
title_sort total t4 rise in pregnancy: a relook?
publisher BMC
series Thyroid Research
issn 1756-6614
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Abstract Background Total T4 (TT4) measurement is preferred to free T4 (FT4) especially in last part of pregnancy. Guidelines by American Thyroid Association, European Thyroid Association and Endocrine Society state that TT4 increases 1.5 times pre-pregnant levels after week 16 of pregnancy. However, this is based on a small study conducted 40 years ago which used radioimmunoassay for determination in changes in TT4. Materials and methods A cross-sectional study was undertaken to find reference interval for thyroid function in different trimester of pregnancy with special reference to look at the degree of elevation of TT4 as compared to non-pregnant women. Two hundred non-pregnant women (excluding oral contraceptive users) and 600 pregnant women (200 from each trimester) aged 18–40 years were consecutively recruited starting from around 6th week of pregnancy having confirmed singleton pregnancy diagnosed at 8th week by ultrasound. The exclusion criteria included: (1) a personal or family history of thyroid disease; (2) presence of goiter or nodule confirmed by ultrasound; (3) anti-TPO antibody positive state (titre > 35 IU/ml). All subjects were tested for urinary spot iodine concentration and those with UIC < 150 μg/L were excluded. Finally, thyroid function tests (TSH, FT4, TT4, TT3) of 168 non-pregnant women and 163, 153 and 148 women at 1st, 2nd and 3rd trimester respectively were analysed.. Results Total T4 (mean ± SD, μg/dl) in non pregnant women and in different trimesters was 8.95 ± 1.71, 9.71 ± 2.39, 12.11 ± 1.55, 11.83 ± 1.49 respectively. Rise in TT4 occurred between 10-18th week. The mean TT4 in second trimester increased by 25% as compared with the value at 6-9th week and by 35% as compared to non-pregnant value. Conclusion Rise in total T4 in second trimester pregnancy is only around 25% as compared to first trimester value and 35% than the non-pregnant value. Hence multiplying non-pregnant T4 value by 1.5 may actually over-diagnose maternal hypothroxinemia and lead to inappropriate diagnosis and treatment of isolated maternal hypothyroxinemia in a significant proportion of subjects.
topic Thyroid function tests
Pregnancy
Reference range
Total T4
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13044-020-00088-5
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