| Literature DB >> 20537182 |
Maynika V Rastogi1, Stephen H LaFranchi.
Abstract
Congenital hypothyroidism (CH) occurs in approximately 1:2,000 to 1:4,000 newborns. The clinical manifestations are often subtle or not present at birth. This likely is due to trans-placental passage of some maternal thyroid hormone, while many infants have some thyroid production of their own. Common symptoms include decreased activity and increased sleep, feeding difficulty, constipation, and prolonged jaundice. On examination, common signs include myxedematous facies, large fontanels, macroglossia, a distended abdomen with umbilical hernia, and hypotonia. CH is classified into permanent and transient forms, which in turn can be divided into primary, secondary, or peripheral etiologies. Thyroid dysgenesis accounts for 85% of permanent, primary CH, while inborn errors of thyroid hormone biosynthesis (dyshormonogeneses) account for 10-15% of cases. Secondary or central CH may occur with isolated TSH deficiency, but more commonly it is associated with congenital hypopitiutarism. Transient CH most commonly occurs in preterm infants born in areas of endemic iodine deficiency. In countries with newborn screening programs in place, infants with CH are diagnosed after detection by screening tests. The diagnosis should be confirmed by finding an elevated serum TSH and low T4 or free T4 level. Other diagnostic tests, such as thyroid radionuclide uptake and scan, thyroid sonography, or serum thyroglobulin determination may help pinpoint the underlying etiology, although treatment may be started without these tests. Levothyroxine is the treatment of choice; the recommended starting dose is 10 to 15 mcg/kg/day. The immediate goals of treatment are to rapidly raise the serum T4 above 130 nmol/L (10 ug/dL) and normalize serum TSH levels. Frequent laboratory monitoring in infancy is essential to ensure optimal neurocognitive outcome. Serum TSH and free T4 should be measured every 1-2 months in the first 6 months of life and every 3-4 months thereafter. In general, the prognosis of infants detected by screening and started on treatment early is excellent, with IQs similar to sibling or classmate controls. Studies show that a lower neurocognitive outcome may occur in those infants started at a later age (> 30 days of age), on lower l-thyroxine doses than currently recommended, and in those infants with more severe hypothyroidism.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20537182 PMCID: PMC2903524 DOI: 10.1186/1750-1172-5-17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Incidence of congenital hypothyroidism: Selected demographics from New York State (2000-2003) (modified from: Harris & Pass, Molec Genet Metab 91:268-277, 2007 [5])
| Overall | 1:1681 |
| Gender | |
| Male | 1:1763 |
| Female | 1:1601 |
| Ethnicity | |
| White | 1:1815 |
| Black | 1:1902 |
| Asian | 1:1016 |
| Hispanic | 1:1559 |
| Birth weight | |
| < 1500 g | 1:1396 |
| 1500 - 2500 g | 1:851 |
| > 2500 g | 1:1843 |
| Single vs. multiple births | |
| Single | 1:1765 |
| Twin | 1:876 |
| Multiple | 1:575 |
| Mother's age | |
| < 20 years | 1:1703 |
| 20-29 years | 1:1608 |
| 30-39 years | 1:1677 |
| > 39 years | 1:1328 |
Prevalence of individual symptoms of hypothyroidism at the time of diagnosis. (modified from: Alm et al. Brit Med J 289:1171-175, 1984 [13].)
| Features listed in questionnaire | Group 1 (n = 215) Initial T4 ≤ 30 nmol/L % | Group 2 (n = 232) Initial T4 > 30 nmol/L % |
|---|---|---|
| Prolonged Jaundice | 59 | 33** |
| Feeding Difficulty | 35 | 16** |
| Lethargy | 34 | 14** |
| Umbilical Hernia | 32 | 18* |
| Macroglossia | 25 | 12* |
| Constipation | 18 | 10 |
| Cold or mottled skin | 18 | 10 |
| Hypothermia | 3 | 3 |
| No symptoms | 16 | 33** |
| Other clinical features reported: | ||
| Abnormal cry | 7 | 6 |
| Edema | 5 | 3 |
| Hypothyroid appearance | 6 | 2 |
| Hypotonia | 3 | 3 |
**p < 0.001, *p < 0.01.
Figure 1Infant with congenital hypothyroidism. A - 3 month old infant with untreated CH; picture demonstrates hypotonic posture, myxedematous facies, macroglossia, and umbilical hernia. B - Same infant, close up of face, showing myxedematous facies, macroglossia, and skin mottling. C - Same infant, close up showing abdominal distension and umbilical hernia.
Figure 2Radiograph of the left lower extremity of two infants, showing absence of the distal femoral epiphysis on left. Radiograph of the left lower extremity of two infants. The infant on the left with congenital hypothyroidism demonstrates absence of the distal femoral and proximal tibial epiphyses, while in the normal infant on the right the distal femoral epiphysis is present.
Figure 3Bamforth- Lazarus syndrome. An 8 month old infant with a homozygous mutation in the TTF-2 gene locus leading to congenital hypothyroidism. Phenotypic features include, low set ears, extensive cleft palate, hypertelorism, spiky hair and low posterior hairline. (Taken from; A novel loss-of-function mutation in TTF-2 is associated with congenital hypothyroidism, thyroid agenesis and cleft palate; Human Molecular Genetics, 2002, Vol. 11, No. 17. Courtesy Dr. Michel Polak and the Oxford University Press.)
Classification and etiology of congenital hypothyroidism
| Primary hypothyroidism | |
|---|---|
| Thyroid dysgenesis: hypothyroidism due to a developmental anomaly | |
| (Thyroid ectopia, athyreosis, hypoplasia, hemiagenesis) | |
| Associated mutations: (these account for only 2% of thyroid dysgenesis cases; 98% unknown) | |
| TTF-2, | |
| NKX2.1, | |
| NKX2.5 | |
| PAX-9 | |
| Thyroid dyshormonogenesis: hypothyroidism due to impaired hormone production | |
| Associated mutations: | |
| Sodium-iodide symporter defect | |
| Thyroid peroxidase defects | |
| Hydrogen peroxide generation defects (DUOX2, DUOXA2 gene mutations) | |
| Pendrin defect (Pendred syndrome) | |
| Thyroglobulin defect | |
| Iodotyrosine deiododinase defect (DEHAL1, SECISBP2 gene mutations) | |
| Resistance to TSH binding or signaling | |
| Associated mutations: | |
| TSH receptor defect | |
| G-protein mutation: pseudohypoparathyroidism type 1a | |
| Isolated TSH deficiency (TSH β subunit gene mutation) | |
| Thyrotropin-releasing hormone deficiency | |
| Isolated, pituitary stalk interruption syndrome (PSIS), hypothalamic lesion, e.g. hamartoma | |
| Thyrotropin-releasing hormone resistance | |
| TRH receptor gene mutation | |
| Hypothyroidism due to deficient transcription factors involved in pituitary development or function | |
| HESX1, LHX3, LHX4, PIT1, PROP1 gene mutations | |
| Resistance to thyroid hormone | |
| Thyroid receptor β mutation | |
| Abnormalities of thyroid hormone transport | |
| Allan-Herndon-Dudley syndrome (monocarboxylase transporter 8 [MCT8] gene mutation) | |
| Pendred syndrome - (hypothyroidism- deafness - goiter) | |
| Bamforth-Lazarus syndrome - (hypothyroidism - cleft palate - spiky hair) | |
| Ectodermal dysplasia - (hypohidrotic - hypothyroidism - ciliary dyskinesia) | |
| Hypothyroidism - (dysmorphism - postaxial polydactyly - intellectual deficit) | |
| Kocher - Deber - Semilange syndrome - (muscular pseudohypertrophy- hypothyroidism) | |
| Benign chorea - hypothyroidism | |
| Choreoathetosis - (hypothyroidism - neonatal respiratory distress) | |
| Obesity - colitis - (hypothyroidism - cardiac hypertrophy - developmental delay) | |
| Maternal intake of antithyroid drugs | |
| Transplacental passage of maternal TSH receptor blocking antibodies | |
| Maternal and neonatal iodine deficiency or excess | |
| Heterozygous mutations of THOX2 or DUOXA2 | |
| Congenital hepatic hemangioma/hemangioendothelioma | |
Etiology of congenital hypothyroidism in 148 patients diagnosed in the Quebec Newborn Screening program from 1990-2004. (modified from: Eugene et al. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 90:2696-2700, 2005 [111])
| Female | Male | Total | Percentage | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Athyreosis | 14 | 10 | 24 | 16 |
| Ectopic | 78 | 24 | 102 | 68 |
| Orthotopic/dyshormonogenesis | 9 | 13 | 22 | 15 |
| Totals | 101 | 47 | 148 | 100 |
Transcription factor gene mutations resulting in thyroid dysgenesis and associated clinical findings
| Mutated Gene | Associated clinical findings |
|---|---|
| Thyroid transcription factor 2 ( | thyroid dysgenesis, choanal atresia, cleft palate and spiky hair |
| congenital hypothyroidism, respiratory distress ataxia and benign chorea | |
| Congenital hypothyroidism and cardiac malformations | |
| Thyroid dysgenesis, kidney and ureteral malformations | |
Figure 4Congenital hypothyroidism: Diagnostic algorithm. Diagnostic algorithm: the diagnosis of congenital hypothyroidism begins with either abnormal newborn screening test results or a clinical suspicion of hypothyroidism, leading to serum thyroid function tests (typically TSH and free T4) to confirm the diagnosis. If a diagnosis of primary or secondary (central) congenital hypothyroidism is confirmed, other diagnostic studies can be undertaken to determine the underlying etiology.
A comparison of the thyroid disorders detected by primary T4-follow-up TSH testing vs. primary TSH testing
| Disorder | Primary T4-Follow-up TSH | Primary TSH |
|---|---|---|
| Primary CH | Good | Good |
| Central CH | Some | No |
| Mild CH | No | Yes |
| Delayed rise TSH | Yes | No |
| Unusual forms of CH, e.g., defects of thyroid cell membrane transport (MCT8), metabolism or action | No | No |
Reference ranges for thyroid function tests at ages 1-4 days and 2-4 weeks [64]
| Age | Free T4 (pmol/L) | Total T4 (nmol/L) | TSH (mU/L) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1-4 days | 25-64 | 129-283 | < 39 |
| 2-4 weeks | 10-26 | 90-206 | < 10 |
Findings in diagnostic studies undertaken to identify the underlying etiology of congenital hypothyroidism
| Defect | Radionuclide image | Ultrasonography | Serum thyroglobulin | Maternal TRB-Ab |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aplasia | No uptake | Absent gland | Low | Negative |
| Hypoplasia | ↓ uptake | Small, eutopic | Intermediate | Negative |
| Ectopia | ↓ uptake, ectopic | Ectopic gland (hypoplastic) | Intermediate | Negative |
| TSHβ mutations | No uptake | Eutopic gland (hypoplastic) | Intermediate | Negative |
| TSH receptor inactivating mutation | ↓ uptake | Eutopic gland | Intermediate-high | Negative |
| Trapping error | ↓ or no uptake | Eutopic gland | Low-intermediate | Negative |
| Beyond trapping error | ↑ uptake | Eutopic, large gland | High Exception: Tg gene mutations | Negative |
| Maternal TRB-Ab | ↓ or no uptake | Eutopic gland | Low-intermediate | Positive |
Figure 5Technetium 99 m scan findings in congenital hypothyroidism. A-Technetium 99 m scan, showing a large gland (approximately twice normal size) in eutopic location, consistent with dyshormonogenesis. B-Technetium 99 m scan, showing uptake in ectopic location, i.e. ectopic gland. C-Minimal uptake, consistent with aplasia or severe hypoplasia.
Time course of normalization of serum T4 and TSH with initial l-thyroxine treatment dose (modified from: LaFranchi & Austin. J Pediatr Endocrinol Metab 20:559-578, 2007[80].)
| Screening Program | l-thyroxine dose (mcg/kg/day) | Time to serum T4 > 10 ug/dL (days) | Time to serum TSH < 9.1 mU/L (days) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Quebec | 6 | 45-90 | |
| Toronto | 7-9 | 74 | |
| France | 8 | 15 | 60 |
| New England | 10 | 31 | |
| US (Pennsylvania) | 10-14 | 7 | 150 |
| Italy | 10-15 | 30 | 30 |
| US (Oregon) | 12-17 | 3 | 14 |