Levothyroxine before conception in women with thyroid antibodies: a step forward in the management of thyroid disease in pregnancy

Abstract Studies suggesting an association between thyroid autoimmunity and pregnancy-related adverse outcomes, particularly miscarriage and preterm delivery, date to nineties. The postulated causes for these associations were attributed to a direct or indirect effect of autoimmunity and/or to a mil...

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Main Author: Roberto Negro
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-06-01
Series:Thyroid Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13044-019-0066-0
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spelling doaj-806805810b794d05b35a307d308ede802020-11-25T03:29:25ZengBMCThyroid Research1756-66142019-06-011211410.1186/s13044-019-0066-0Levothyroxine before conception in women with thyroid antibodies: a step forward in the management of thyroid disease in pregnancyRoberto Negro0Division of EndocrinologyAbstract Studies suggesting an association between thyroid autoimmunity and pregnancy-related adverse outcomes, particularly miscarriage and preterm delivery, date to nineties. The postulated causes for these associations were attributed to a direct or indirect effect of autoimmunity and/or to a mild thyroid impairment. Since then, small trials and several meta-analyses confirmed a detrimental effect of thyroid autoimmunity and suggested that patients with thyroid autoimmunity who wish to conceive or are pregnant might benefit from levothyroxine treatment to decrease the rate of miscarriage and preterm delivery. A recently published large trial investigated the hypothesis that the administration of levothyroxine in euthyroid antibody-positive women seeking pregnancy might increase the live birth rate. Women who were trying to conceive and had a history of miscarriage or infertility were tested for TSH and thyroperoxidase antibodies. Euthyroid antibody positive women were randomized to receive 50 μg/day of levothyroxine or placebo and were tested for thyroid function throughout pregnancy. In patients with thyroid function test results outside of assay-specific reference limits, the trial agent was discontinued. 56.6% in the LT4 group and 58.3% in the placebo group became pregnant and the live birth rates were similar in the two groups (37.4% vs 37.9%, respectively). There was also no difference in pre-term delivery rate and other maternal and neonatal outcomes between the two groups. The present commentary discusses the main findings of the trial and implications for clinical practice.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13044-019-0066-0ThyroidAutoimmunityPregnancyMiscarriagePreterm deliveryHypothyroidism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Roberto Negro
spellingShingle Roberto Negro
Levothyroxine before conception in women with thyroid antibodies: a step forward in the management of thyroid disease in pregnancy
Thyroid Research
Thyroid
Autoimmunity
Pregnancy
Miscarriage
Preterm delivery
Hypothyroidism
author_facet Roberto Negro
author_sort Roberto Negro
title Levothyroxine before conception in women with thyroid antibodies: a step forward in the management of thyroid disease in pregnancy
title_short Levothyroxine before conception in women with thyroid antibodies: a step forward in the management of thyroid disease in pregnancy
title_full Levothyroxine before conception in women with thyroid antibodies: a step forward in the management of thyroid disease in pregnancy
title_fullStr Levothyroxine before conception in women with thyroid antibodies: a step forward in the management of thyroid disease in pregnancy
title_full_unstemmed Levothyroxine before conception in women with thyroid antibodies: a step forward in the management of thyroid disease in pregnancy
title_sort levothyroxine before conception in women with thyroid antibodies: a step forward in the management of thyroid disease in pregnancy
publisher BMC
series Thyroid Research
issn 1756-6614
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Abstract Studies suggesting an association between thyroid autoimmunity and pregnancy-related adverse outcomes, particularly miscarriage and preterm delivery, date to nineties. The postulated causes for these associations were attributed to a direct or indirect effect of autoimmunity and/or to a mild thyroid impairment. Since then, small trials and several meta-analyses confirmed a detrimental effect of thyroid autoimmunity and suggested that patients with thyroid autoimmunity who wish to conceive or are pregnant might benefit from levothyroxine treatment to decrease the rate of miscarriage and preterm delivery. A recently published large trial investigated the hypothesis that the administration of levothyroxine in euthyroid antibody-positive women seeking pregnancy might increase the live birth rate. Women who were trying to conceive and had a history of miscarriage or infertility were tested for TSH and thyroperoxidase antibodies. Euthyroid antibody positive women were randomized to receive 50 μg/day of levothyroxine or placebo and were tested for thyroid function throughout pregnancy. In patients with thyroid function test results outside of assay-specific reference limits, the trial agent was discontinued. 56.6% in the LT4 group and 58.3% in the placebo group became pregnant and the live birth rates were similar in the two groups (37.4% vs 37.9%, respectively). There was also no difference in pre-term delivery rate and other maternal and neonatal outcomes between the two groups. The present commentary discusses the main findings of the trial and implications for clinical practice.
topic Thyroid
Autoimmunity
Pregnancy
Miscarriage
Preterm delivery
Hypothyroidism
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13044-019-0066-0
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