UNLABELLED: We describe an infant inadvertently exposed to radioiodine at 17 weeks gestation. His mother had received 400 MBq of (131)I for hyperthyroidism (total T4 178 nmol/L, thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) <0.1 mU/L, 4-h (131)I uptake 16%). Following cordocentesis at 27 weeks (free T4 12.7 pmol/L, TSH 35.4 mU/L) intra-amniotic thyroxine was withheld and a male infant was born at 39 weeks gestation, birthweight 3520 g. Cord TSH was low (0.1 mU/L), total T4 151 nmol/L on day 4, the mother having received no medication during pregnancy. Postnatal follow-up showed mild TSH elevation (11.0-19.4 mU/L) but normal free T4 (9-12.7 pmol/L) during the first 2 years of life following which the child was discharged still untreated. On recall at 4.3 years, TSH elevation persisted (15.4 mU/L) and ultrasound showed several hypoechoic thyroid nodules within the left lobe that disappeared after thyroxine treatment. CONCLUSION: In the event of inadvertent exposure to radioiodine in utero, the infant should receive thyroxine therapy from birth in order to protect the thyroid gland from TSH over-stimulation, however mild.
UNLABELLED: We describe an infant inadvertently exposed to radioiodine at 17 weeks gestation. His mother had received 400 MBq of (131)I for hyperthyroidism (total T4 178 nmol/L, thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) <0.1 mU/L, 4-h (131)I uptake 16%). Following cordocentesis at 27 weeks (free T4 12.7 pmol/L, TSH 35.4 mU/L) intra-amniotic thyroxine was withheld and a male infant was born at 39 weeks gestation, birthweight 3520 g. Cord TSH was low (0.1 mU/L), total T4 151 nmol/L on day 4, the mother having received no medication during pregnancy. Postnatal follow-up showed mild TSH elevation (11.0-19.4 mU/L) but normal free T4 (9-12.7 pmol/L) during the first 2 years of life following which the child was discharged still untreated. On recall at 4.3 years, TSH elevation persisted (15.4 mU/L) and ultrasound showed several hypoechoic thyroid nodules within the left lobe that disappeared after thyroxine treatment. CONCLUSION: In the event of inadvertent exposure to radioiodine in utero, the infant should receive thyroxine therapy from birth in order to protect the thyroid gland from TSH over-stimulation, however mild.