| Literature DB >> 22573936 |
Isabela M Bensenor1, Rodrigo D Olmos, Paulo A Lotufo.
Abstract
Thyroid disorders are highly prevalent, occurring most frequently in aging women. Thyroid-associated symptoms are very similar to symptoms of the aging process; thus, improved methods for diagnosing overt and subclinical hypothyroidism in elderly people are crucial. Thyrotropin measurement is considered to be the main test for detecting hypothyroidism. Combined evaluations of thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) and free-thyroxine can detect overt hypothyroidism (high TSH with low free-thyroxine levels) and subclinical hypothyroidism (high TSH with normal free-thyroxine levels). It is difficult to confirm the diagnosis of thyroid diseases based only on symptoms, but presence of symptoms could be an indicator of who should be evaluated for thyroid function. The most important reasons to treat overt hypothyroidism are to relieve symptoms and avoid progression to myxedema. Overt hypothyroidism is classically treated using L-thyroxine; elderly patients require a low initial dose that is increased every 4 to 6 weeks until normalization of TSH levels. After stabilization, TSH levels are monitored yearly. There is no doubt about the indication for treatment of overt hypothyroidism, but indications for treatment of subclinical disease are controversial. Although treatment of subclinical hypothyroidism may result in lipid profile improvement, there is no evidence that this improvement is associated with decreased cardiovascular or all-cause mortality in elderly patients. In patients with a high risk of progression from subclinical to overt disease, close monitoring of thyroid function could be the best option.Entities:
Keywords: diagnosis; elderly; overt hypothyroidism; subclinical hypothyroidism; treatment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22573936 PMCID: PMC3340110 DOI: 10.2147/CIA.S23966
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Interv Aging ISSN: 1176-9092 Impact factor: 4.458
Prevalence of overt and subclinical hypothyroidism in elderly people
| Reference | Place | Sample | Age of participants | Measurements | Prevalence (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flatau et al | Israel | 751 (289 men and 462 men) | ≥65 years | TSH (>4.5 mIU/L), FT4 (14 to 28 pmol/L) | Overt and subclinical in men: 9.7% |
| Cappola et al | US, community dwelling individuals | 3233 (1307 men and 1926 women) | ≥65 years | TSH (>4.5 mIU/L), FT4 (not informed) | Overt: 1.6% |
| Gussekloo et al | The Netherlands, population based | 558 (189 men and 369 women) | ≥85 years | TSH (>4.8 mIU/L) | Overt: 7.0% |
| Wilson et al | United Kingdom, community sample registered with 20 family practices | 5960 (2892 men and 2980 women) | ≥65 years | TSH (>5.5 mIU/L), FT4 (<9 pmol/L), FT3 (<3.5 pmol/L) | Overt: 0.4% (men 0.4% and women 0.4%) |
| Diaz-Olmos et al | Brazil, women at workplace | 314 | ≥40 years | TSH (>4.0 mIU/L), FT4 (<10 pmol/L) | Overt: 3.5% |
| Bensenor et al | Brazil population-based | 1373 (538 men and 835 women) | ≥65 years-old | TSH (>5.0 mIU/L), FT4 (<10 pmol/L) | Overt |
Abbreviations: TSH, thyrotropin or thyroid stimulating hormone; FT4, free-thyroxine; FT3, free-triiodothyronine.
Note:
Measurements (cut-off points for diagnosis of overt hypothyroidism).
Incidence of overt hypothyroidism in elderly people
| Reference | Place | Sample | Age of participants | Measurements | Incidence (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vanderpump et al | United Kingdom | 1877, population based | ≥38 years | TSH (not informed), FT4 (not informed) | Overt |
| Gopinath et al | Australia | 951, population based | ≥55 years | TSH (>4.0 mIU/L), FT4 (<11.5 pmol/L) | Overt |
Notes:
Measurements (cut-off for diagnosis of overt hypothyroidism);
as there are few studies evaluating incidence of overt hypothyroidism in elderly people, this study was included; mean age was 58 years (range 38–93 years).
Abbreviations: TSH, thyrotropin or thyroid stimulating hormone; FT4, free-thyroxine.
Unrecognized cases of overt hypothyroidism in elderly people at different scenarios
| Reference | Place | Sample | Age of participants | Measurements | Frequency of unrecognized cases of overt hypothyroidism (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Petersen et al | Sweden | 1154, population based | ≥50 years | TSH, FT4 | Women: 1.3% |
| Bemben et al (Part 1) | US | 283, retrospective analysis in a Department of Family Medicine | >60 years | TSH, FT4 | Men: 1.3% |
| Bensenor et al | Brazil | 1373, population based | ≥65 years | TSH, FT4 | Men: 4.8% |
| Nyström et al | Sweden | 496, users of an outpatient clinic | ≥50 years | TSH, FT4 | Women: 2.2% |
| Nyström et al | Sweden | 383, inpatients of emergency ward | ≥50 years | TSH, FT4 | Women: 1.3% |
| Chen et al | Taiwan | 54,756, hospital admissions at emergency department | Mean age: 75.8 ± 12.8 | TSH, FT4 | Overt: 0.1% (men 0.06%, women: 0.04%) |
Note:
As there are no studies evaluating unrecognized cases of overt hypothyroidism in emergency department only in samples of elderly people, this study (age range 27–98 years) was included; however mean age of subjects was 75.8 ± 12.8 years.
Abbreviations: TSH, thyrotropin or thyroid stimulating hormone; FT4, free-thyroxine.
Studies that estimated presence of symptoms in groups of subjects with overt and/or subclinical hypothyroidism compared to euthyroid subjects
| Reference | Place | Sample | Age of participants | Symptoms | Frequency of symptoms |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cooper et al | US | 14 receiving thyroxine and twelve receiving placebo | Mean age 55 years old | Symptoms of hypothyroidism | Symptoms improved in 57.1% in the active group and 25% in the placebo group; |
| Canaris et al | US | 76 cases and 147 controls | Mean age 44.4 years (cases) and 45.8 years (controls) | Hoarse voice, deep voice, dry skin, coarse hair, cold sensitivity, tiredness, presence of puffy eyes, muscle cramps, muscle weakness, constipation, depression, slow thinking, poor memory, difficult for math, irregular menses, heavy menses | Hypothyroid: 30.2% |
| Bemben et al (Part 2) | US | 205 women and 78 men; 15.4% of men and 14.6% of women with subclinical hypothyroidism | ≥60 years | Clinical symptoms of hypothyroidism | No significant difference in the frequency of symptoms in subjects with subclinical hypothyroidism compared to subjects with normal thyroid function |
| Kong et al | United Kingdom | Only women: 23 in the thyroxine group and 17 in placebo group | Mean age thyroxine group 53 (3) years; mean age in the placebo group 45 (4) years | Fatigue, weight gain, anxiety symptoms | Only a significant worsening of anxiety scores in the group receiving L-thyroxine |
| Engum et al | Norway | 30,589 people; 745 men and women with subclinical hypothyroidism | 40–89 years | Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale | No association found between anxiety and depression symptoms and subclinical hypothyroidism |
| Grabe et al | Germany | 3790, 18 cases of overt hypothyroidism, and 27 of subclinical hypothyroidism | Mean age overt hypothyroidism group 52.1 (14.2); mean age subclinical hypothyroidism group 51.9 (12.5); mean age euthyroid group 59.2 (46.9) | Zerrssen Complaint Scale | No difference in the number of symptoms and complaints in subjects with overt and subclinical hypothyroidism compared to euthyroid controls |
| Jorde et al | Norway | 36 subjects with subclinical hypothyroidism, and 33 controls | Mean age intervention group 61.6 ± 11.5 years; mean age placebo group 63 ± 12.4 years | 14 tests of cognitive function, Beck Depression Inventory, General Health Questionnaire, questionnaire about symptoms of hypothyroidism | After 1 year of thyroxin there is no difference in the performance of cognitive tests, Beck Depression Inventory and in the frequency of hypothyroidism symptoms between the two groups; subjects with subclinical hypothyroidism scored significantly better than controls on the GHQ-30 |
Results of clinical trials for treatment of subclinical hypothyroidism focusing on different outcomes
| Reference | Place | Sample/follow-up | Age of participants | Results | Observations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cooper et al | Boston, US | 14 subjects in active group (4) and twelve in the placebo group (97% women); 1-year on LT4 | Mean age 55 years | No difference between groups regarding symptoms of hypothyroidism | All patients included in the study presented subclinical hypothyroidism after treatment with Iodine-131 20 years earlier |
| Nyström et al | Gothenburg, Sweden | 17 women; 6 months for placebo and 6 months for hormone | >50 years | No difference between groups regarding symptoms of hypothyroidism | All women diagnosed in a screening program |
| Jaeschke et al | Hamilton, Canada | 32 subjects | >55 years | No difference between groups regarding symptoms of hypothyroidism | All subjects selected from an outpatient clinic in a community hospital |
| Meier et al | Switzerland | 63 women, 31 assigned to LT4 and 32 assigned to placebo; 48 weeks of follow-up | Mean age 58.6 (1.3) years | Results showed that physiological LT4 replacement in patients with subclinical hypothyroidism has a beneficial effect on low density lipoprotein cholesterol levels and clinical symptoms of hypothyroidism | Some patients included in the trial presented subclinical hypothyroidism after treatment with Iodine-131 20 years earlier. The proportion was similar in the active and the placebo group |
| Christ-Crain M et al | Basel, Switzerland | 63 subjects with subclinical hypothyroidism (31 in the L-T4 group and 32 in the placebo group) | Mean age 57.5 ± 9.8 years | CRP values increases with progressive thyroid failure; supplementation of LT4 did not improve significantly CRP levels | Thyroid Research Unit of the Division of Endocrinology, Department of Medicine at the University Hospital, Basel |
| Iqbal et al | Norway | 64 subjects with subclinical hypothyroidism; 32 assigned to LT4 and 32 assigned to placebo | 62.0 (11.9) years in the LT4 group and 62.7 (12.4) years in the placebo group | Reduction in the levels of serum lipids in the group treated with LT4 | Subjects with subclinical hypothyroidism selected from the 5143 subjects of the 5th Tromso Study |
| Razvi et al | United Kingdom | 150 subjects with subclinical hypothyroidism; 50 assigned to LT4 and 49 to placebo; 12 weeks of follow-up | Mean-age 53.8 (12.6) years | Subjects with subclinical hypothyroidism treated by LT4 presented a significant improvement in cardiovascular risk factors (Total cholesterol, LDL-cholesterol, waist to hip ratio, endothelial function) and symptoms of tiredness | Community-dwelling patients |
| Teixeira et al | Brazil | 32 subjects: 18 in the LT4 group and 20 in the placebo group; 6 months follow-up | Mean age LT4 group 52.5 (10.1) years; mean age in the placebo group 46.6 (9.9) years | Reduction of serum lipids especially on the subgroup of subjects with antithyroid peroxidase antibodies, TSH > 8 IU/L, body mass index ≥25 kg/m2 and in menopause | Endocrinology Outpatient Clinic, University Hospital Clementino Fraga Filho, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro |
| Teixeira et al | Brazil | 26 subjects: eleven receiving LT4 and 15 receiving placebo; 1-year follow-up | Mean age LT4 group 54.4 (9.0) years; mean age in the placebo group 48.1 (10.0) years | A significant lipid profile improvement occurred 1 year after L-T4 replacement therapy in the active group compared to placebo group | Endocrinology Outpatient Clinic, University Hospital Clementino Fraga Filho, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro |
| Nagasaki et al | Japan | 95 women: 48 assigned to LT4 and 47 assigned to placebo; 5-month follow-up | Mean age in LT4 group 64.4 (2.6) years; mean age in placebo group 66.0 (3.0) years | Sustained normalization of thyroid function during LT4 replacement therapy significantly decreases brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity in female subclinical hypothyroid patients suggesting possible prevention of cardiovascular disease | Ninety-five consecutive patients with newly detected subclinical hypothyroidism due to chronic thyroiditis with antithyroglobulin or antithyroid peroxidase antibodies of the Osaka City University Hospital |
| Parle et al | England | 94 subjects: 52 assigned to LT4 and 42 assigned to placebo; 1-year follow-up | ≥65 years | Performance in cognitive tests did not improve in subjects treated for subclinical hypothyroidism compared to placebo | Patients with subclinical hypothyroidism were recruited from a community-based cross-sectional study describing the prevalence of thyroid dysfunction in the elderly identified by screening of thyroid function |
Abbreviation: LT4, L-thyroxine.
Progression of normal thyroid status to subclinical hypothyroidism and of subclinical hypothyroidism to overt hypothyroidism
| Reference | Place | Age/follow-up | Antithyroid peroxidase | Evolution to overt disease | Observations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parle et al | United Kingdom | Mean age men 70.1 (6.1) years; mean age men women 70.7 (7.3) years | Incidence | TSH between 5–10 mIU/l/no antibodies: 2/28: 7.1% | Evaluated progression of subclinical hypothyroidism to overt disease according to TSH and antithyroid antibodies levels |
| Vanderpump et al | United Kingdom | 86.2% of sample with >45 years | Incidence | Women | Evaluated progression of subclinical hypothyroidism to overt disease |
| Gopinath et al | Australia | ≥55 years | No information | Subclinical hypothyroidism in women (using men as a reference): OR, 3.71 (95% CI, 1.05–13.11) | Evaluated progression of normal thyroid status to subclinical and overt hypothyroidism |
Abbreviations: TSH, thyrotropin or thyroid stimulating hormone; FT4, free-thyroxine; OR, odds ratio; 95% CI, 95% confidence interval; BMI, body mass index.
Incidence of cardiovascular events, death, and other outcomes in people with subclinical hypothyroidism in cohort studies
| Reference | Place | Sample/follow-up | Age of participants | Results | Observations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| van den Beld et al | US | 403 independent and ambulatory living men; follow-up of 4 years | 73–94 years | Low FT4 was associated with a better 4-year survival | These results may reflect an adaptive mechanism to prevent excessive catabolism |
| Rodondi et al | US | 2730 men and women; follow-up of 4 years | 70–79 years | In multivariate analysis using euthyroid subjects as the reference category, relative risk of congestive heart failure in subjects with TSH of 7.0–9.9 mIU/L was of 2.58 (95% CI, 1.19–5.60); and TSH ≥10.0 mIU/L, 3.26 (95% CI, 1.37–7.77) | Subclinical hypothyroidism was not associated with increased risk for coronary heart disease, stroke, peripheral artery disease, or cardiovascular or total mortality |
| Cappola et al | US | 3233 community-dwelling individuals; follow-up of 2 years | 65 years or older | There was no difference in the cardiovascular or mortality outcomes in subjects with overt or subclinical hypothyroidism compared to euthyroid subjects | Individuals with subclinical hypothyroidism had an adjusted hazard ratio of 1.07 (95% CI, 0.90–1.28) for incident coronary heart disease |
| Kalra et al | United Kingdom | 131 elderly patients that underwent surgical treatment for hip fracture; 1-year follow-up | Mean age 82.0 (8.9) years | Presence of subclinical hypothyroidism (15%) did not affect 1-year mortality | |
| Sgarbi et al | Brazil | 1110 Japanese-Brazilians; follow-up of 7.5 years | 57 years (68.8% of the sample with age ≥50 years) | In multivariate analysis, subclinical hypothyroidism was associated to all-cause mortality (HR, 2.3; 95% CI, 1.2–4.4) but not with cardiovascular mortality, using euthyroid subjects as the reference category | |
| Razvi et al | United Kingdom | 2376 community-dwelling subjects | Mean age 45.5 years | There is an association between incident ischemic coronary heart disease and ischemic heart disease mortality with subclinical hypothyroidism (HR, 1.76; 95% CI, 1.15–2.71 and HR 1.79; 95% CI, 1.02–3.56, respectively) | Subsequent treatment of subclinical hypothyroidism with L-thyroxine appears to attenuate ischemic heart disease morbidity and mortality |
| De Jongh et al | The Netherlands | 1219 subjects without thyroid diseases from a population-based cohort; follow-up of 10.7 years | 65 years or older | Subclinical hypothyroidism was not associated with increased overall mortality risk (HR, 0.89; 95% CI, 0.59–1.35) using euthyroid subjects as the reference group | The study does not support disadvantageous effects of subclinical thyroid disorders on physical and cognitive function, depression, or mortality in an older population |
| Lee et al | US | 3567 US community dwelling adults; follow-up of 14 years | 65 years or older | Men with subclinical hypothyroidism presented a higher risk of hip fracture compared to euthyroid men (OR, 2.45, 1.27–4.73); no relationship between subclinical hypothyroidism and hip fractures was observed in women |
Abbreviations: F4, free-thyroxine; OR, odds ratio; 95% CI, 95% confidence interval; HR, hazard ratio.