| Literature DB >> 27683225 |
Kristian Hillert Winther1,2, Johanna Eva Märta Wichman3,4, Steen Joop Bonnema3,4, Laszlo Hegedüs3,4.
Abstract
By a systematic review and meta-analysis to investigate clinically relevant effects of selenium supplementation in patients with chronic autoimmune thyroiditis. Controlled trials in adults (≥18 years) with autoimmune thyroiditis, comparing selenium with or without levothyroxine substitution, versus placebo and/or levothyroxine substitution, were eligible for inclusion. Identified outcomes were serum thyrotropin (thyroid stimulating hormone) levels in LT4-untreated patients, thyroid ultrasound and health-related quality of life. Eleven publications, covering nine controlled trials, were included in the systematic review. Random effects model meta-analyses were performed in weighted mean difference for thyroid stimulating hormone, ultrasound and health-related quality of life. Quality of evidence was assessed per outcome, using GRADE. Meta-analyses showed no change in thyroid stimulating hormone, or improvements in health-related quality of life or thyroid echogenicity (ultrasound), between levothyroxine substitution-untreated patients assigned to selenium supplementation or placebo. Three trials found some improvement in wellbeing in patients receiving levothyroxine substitution, but could not be synthesized in a meta-analysis. The quality of evidence ranged from very low to low for thyroid stimulating hormone as well as ultrasound outcomes, and low to moderate for health-related quality of life, and was generally downgraded due to small sample sizes. We found no effect of selenium supplementation on thyroid stimulating hormone, health-related quality of life or thyroid ultrasound, in levothyroxine substitution-untreated individuals, and sporadic evaluation of clinically relevant outcomes in levothyroxine substitution-treated patients. Future well-powered RCTs, evaluating e.g. disease progression or health-related quality of life, are warranted before determining the relevance of selenium supplementation in autoimmune thyroiditis.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic autoimmune thyroiditis; Hashimoto’s thyroiditis; Meta-analysis; Quality of life; Selenium supplementation; Systematic review; Thyroid hormones; Thyroid ultrasound
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27683225 PMCID: PMC5272877 DOI: 10.1007/s12020-016-1098-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Endocrine ISSN: 1355-008X Impact factor: 3.633
Fig. 1Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses (PRISMA) flow chart. Flow chart of study selection process, with number of studies excluded at each step in the systematic review and meta-analysis. PRISMA flow diagram
Characteristics of included studies
| Study | Country | Sample size (int/con) | Intervention groups | LT4 baseline | Age in years | % Female | Evaluated outcomes | Months of intervention |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pilli [ | Italy |
| 80 μg Seme vs. 160 μg Seme vs. placebo | None | Mean: 43 | 100 | TSH, FT3, FT4, SF-36, US: echogenicity, volume | 12 |
| De Farias [ | Brazil |
| 200 μg Seme vs. placebo | Some | Median 46 | 91 | US: echogenicity, volume | 3 |
| Eskes [ | The Netherlands |
| 200 μg Na2SeO3 vs. placebo | None | Median 44.3 | 90 | TSH, FT4, SF-36 | 6 |
| Anistasilakis [ | Greece |
| 200 μg Seme for 3 or 6 months vs. placebo | Some | Mean 43.7 | 62 | TSH, FT4, FT3 | 3 or 6 |
| Krysiak [ | Poland |
| 200 μg Seme vs. 200 μg Seme + LT4 vs. LT4 or placebo | None | Mean 40.5 | 100 | TSH, FT4, FT3 | 6 |
| Krysiak [ | Poland |
| 200 μg Seme vs. 200 μg Seme + LT4 vs. LT4 or placebo | None | Mean 38.5 | 100 | TSH, FT4, FT3 | 6 |
| Nacamulli [ | Italy |
| 80 μg Na2SeO3 vs. no treatment | None | Median 43 | 86 | TSH, FT4, US: anteroposterior diameter of each lobe, echogenicity | 12 |
| Karanikas [ | Austria |
| 200 μg Na2SeO3 vs. placebo | All | Mean 47 | 100 | SF-12 | 3 |
| Duntas [ | Greece |
| 200 μg Seme + LT4 vs. placebo + LT4 | All | Mean 47.8 | 86 | Evaluation of sleep, mood, fatigue, behavior and tiredness | 6 |
| Gartner [ | Germany |
| Se-Se, Se-0, placebo-Se, placebo-0 | All | Mean 41 | 100 | US: echogenicity | 6 |
| Gartner [ | Germany |
| 200 μg/d Na2SeO3 vs. placebo | All | Mean 42.3 | 100 | US: echogenicity, SF-12 | 3 |
int/con intervention group/control group, LT4 baseline trial participants receiving levothyroxine (LT4) treatment at baseline, % Fem percentage of females in trial population, Seme selenomethionine, Na SeO sodium selenite, TSH thyroid-stimulating hormone, FT3 free triiodothyronine, FT4 free thyroxine, SF-36 36-item short-form health survey, SF-12 12-item short-form health survey
a This trial had four intervention groups, and only the intervention groups receiving selenomethionine or placebo were included in the meta-analyses
b This trial was an open-label follow-up study after that reported in ref. [36], in which participants followed different intervention regimes
GRADE evidence profile
| Quality assessment | Quality of evidence | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Outcome (number of trials) | Limitations | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Publication bias | |
| Reduction in thyroid volume assessed by ultrasound (2) | Serious limitations | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | Serious imprecision (small sample size) | Undetected | ++Low |
| Improvement in thyroid ultrasound echogenicity, LT4-untreated patients (2) | No serious limitations | Serious inconsistency (conflicting findings) | Serious indirectness (surrogate outcome) | Serious imprecision (small sample size) | Undetected | +Very low |
| Improvement in thyroid ultrasound echogenicity, LT4-treated patients (2) | Serious limitations | Serious inconsistency (conflicting findings) | Serious indirectness (surrogate outcome) | Serious imprecision (small sample size) | Undetected | +Very low |
| Improvement in HRQL, SF-36 (2) | No serious limitations | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | Serious imprecision (small sample size) | Undetected | +++Moderate |
| Improvement in HRQL, other instruments (3) | Serious limitations (unclear blinding) | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | Serious imprecision (small sample size) | Undetected | ++Low |
| Change in thyroid function (2)a | No serious limitations | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | Serious imprecision (small sample size) | Undetected | +++Moderate |
| TSH at 3 months (4) | No serious limitations | No serious inconsistency | Serious indirectness (surrogate outcome) | Serious imprecision (overall CI across 0) | Undetected | ++Low |
| TSH at 6 months (5) | No serious limitations | No serious inconsistency | Serious indirectness (surrogate outcome) | Serious imprecision (overall CI across 0) | Undetected | ++Low |
| TSH at 12 months (2) | No serious limitations | Serious inconsistency (heterogeneity) | Serious indirectness (surrogate outcome) | Serious imprecision (overall CI across 0) | Undetected | +Very low |
| Adverse effects (4) | No serious limitations | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | Serious imprecision (small sample size) | Undetected | +++Moderate |
a Defined as the development of hypothyroidism during the course of a trial
Risk of bias of included trials
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1 Blinding: Unclear risk of bias for ultrasound outcomes, low risk of bias for other outcomes; Selective outcome reporting:
2 Selective outcome reporting: High risk of bias for ultrasound outcomes (incomplete outcome reporting, including missing account for disease duration, cannot be analyzed in a meta-analysis); Low risk of bias for other outcomes
3 Selective outcome reporting: High risk of bias for ultrasound outcomes, because thyroid volume as assessed by thyroid ultrasound was described in methods, but the results are not reported
4 Selective outcome reporting: high risk of bias for Quality of Life outcome, incomplete data reporting (cannot be analyzed in a meta-analysis); Low risk of bias for other outcomes. Other bias: High risk of bias for Quality of Life outcome (unknown outcome measure), unclear risk (unclear source of funding)
5 Selective outcome reporting: high risk of bias for Quality of Life outcome, incomplete data reporting (cannot be analyzed in a meta-analysis); Low risk of bias for other outcomes
6 Selective outcome reporting: High risk of bias for Quality of Life and ultrasound outcomes (incomplete outcome reporting, cannot be analyzed in a meta-analysis), low risk of bias for other outcomes. Other bias: High risk of bias for assessment of thyroid echogenicity, which was done qualitatively
Fig. 2Meta-analysis of the effect of selenium supplementation on serum thyrotropin (thyroid simulating hormone) levels in populations of chronic AIT patients not receiving LT4. Weighted mean difference (WMD) in serum TSH levels after 3, 6 and 12 months’ selenium supplementation vs. control in populations of AIT patients not receiving LT4. Boxes represent mean values of the outcomes in a study, horizontal lines the 95 % confidence intervals, and the box area is proportional to the weight of the individual study (as seen in “Weight”). Diamonds represent the overall summary estimate, with confidence interval given by its width. I 2 shows the heterogeneity among studies, and with p-value