| Literature DB >> 34113317 |
Oshini Mallawa Kankanamalage1, Qiongjie Zhou2,3, Xiaotian Li2,3.
Abstract
Pregnancy is a complex state with many endocrinological challenges to a woman's physiology. Gestational Hypothyroidism (GHT) is an emerging condition where insufficiency of the thyroid gland has developed during pregnancy in a previously euthyroid woman. It is different to overt hypothyroidism, where marked elevation of thyroid-stimulating hormone with corresponding reduction in free thyroxine levels, is well known to cause detrimental effects to both the mother and the baby. During the past couple of decades, it has been shown that GHT is associated with multiple adverse maternal and fetal outcomes such as miscarriage, pre-eclampsia, placental abruption, fetal loss, premature delivery, neurocognitive and neurobehavioral development. However, three randomized controlled trials and a prospective cohort study performed within the last decade, show that there is no neurodevelopmental improvement in the offspring of mothers who received levothyroxine treatment for GHT. Thus, the benefit of initiating treatment for GHT is highly debated within the clinical community as there may also be risks associated with over-treatment. In addition, regulatory mechanisms that could possibly lead to GHT during pregnancy are not well elucidated. This review aims to unravel pregnancy induced physiological challenges that could provide basis for the development of GHT. During pregnancy, there is increased renal clearance of iodine leading to low iodine state. Also, an elevated estrogen level leading to an increase in circulating thyroglobulin level and a decrease in free thyroxine level. Moreover, placenta secretes compounds such as human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG), placental growth factor (PIGF) and soluble FMS-like tyrosine kinase-1 (s-Flt1) that could affect the thyroid function. In turn, the passage of thyroid hormones and iodine to the fetus is highly regulated within the placental barrier. Together, these mechanisms are hypothesized to contribute to the development of intolerance of thyroid function leading to GHT in a vulnerable individual.Entities:
Keywords: estrogen; gestational hypothyroidism; iodine; levothyroxine; placenta; pregnancy; subclinical hypothyroidism; thyroid disorders
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34113317 PMCID: PMC8185325 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2021.653407
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1The hypothesis of ‘gestational hypothyroidism’ (GHT). GHT is developed due to thyroid regulatory mechanisms during pregnancy. Hypothalamus-pituitary-thyroid axis (HPT axis) is a deviated from its normal function as a result of multiple pregnancy induced pathophysiological insults. Mal placentation plays a central role in this multifactorial hypothesis.
Summary (part 1) of the studies that have assessed neurocognitive and neurodevelopment of the child born to mothers with Gestational Hypothyroidism (GHT) and treated with appropriate dose of levothyroxine throughout pregnancy.
| Type | Name of the study | Definition of GHT | Sample size | Treatment | Time of initiation of therapy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RCT* | Lazarus et al. ( | TSH* > 97.5th percentile | 794 | Starting dose of 150ug of levothyroxine per day (adjusted as necessary) | Median gestational age of 13 weeks + 3days |
| RCT | Hales et al. ( | TSH > 97.5th percentile | 449 | Starting dose of 150ug of levothyroxine per day (adjusted as necessary) | Median gestational age of 13 weeks + 3days |
| RCT | Hales et al. ( | TSH > 97.5th percentile | 475 | Starting dose of 150ug of levothyroxine per day (adjusted as necessary) | Median gestational age of 13 weeks + 3days |
| RCT | Casey et al. ( | SCH* –> TSH >= 4.0mU/L with normal fT4 | 677 | Starting dose of 100ug of levothyroxine (adjusted as necessary) | Mean gestational age of 16.7 weeks |
| IH*–> fT4 < 0.86ng/dL with normal TSH | 526 | Starting dose of 50ug of levothyroxine (adjusted as necessary) | Mean gestational age of 17.8 weeks | ||
| Prospective Cohort | Zhou et al. ( | TSH > 97.5th percentile and TPOAb (+) * | 466 | Levothyroxine treatment targeting TSH values of 0.1-2.5mU/L | Before conception and after conception (mean gestational age 13.5 weeks) |
*RCT, Randomised Controlled Trial; TSH, Thyroid-Stimulating Hormone; fT4, Free Thyroxine; SCH, Subclinical Hypothyroidism; IH, Isolated Hypothyroxinemia; TPOAb (+), Thyroid Peroxidases antibodies.
Summary (part 2) of the studies that have assessed neurocognitive and neurodevelopment of the child born to mothers with Gestational Hypothyroidism (GHT) and treated with appropriate dose of levothyroxine throughout pregnancy.
| Name of the study | Child neurological outcome measured | Assessments used | Result comparing intervention vs control/placebo groups | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lazarus et al. ( | IQ at age 3 | Wechsler preschool and primary scale of intelligence (2003 edition) Child behavior aspects that may affect IQ is measured by Child Behaviors Checklist (CBCL 2000) Achenbach System of empirically based assessment, University of Vermont Behaviors Rating Inventory of Executive Function, preschool version, 2003 Child Behavior Checklist at 36months and 60 months of age - behavior and social competency assessment | No significant difference of the IQ scores of children | |
| Hales et al. ( | Full Scale IQ at age group 7-10 years old |
Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children, Fourth Edition UK (WISC-IV) calculated equally from verbal, perceptual reasoning, working memory IQ and processing speed IQ domains. | No significant difference in IQ scores of children | |
| Long term memory, working memory, fine motor coordination |
Developmental Neuropsychological Assessment (NEPSY), Second Edition | |||
| Hales et al. ( | ADHD features in children 7-10 years of age |
The Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) The Child ADHD Questionnaire (ADHDq) Social Communication Questionnaire (SCQ) | No significant differences of ADHD features between the children | |
| Casey et al. ( | Full Scale IQ at 5 years of age |
Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence III (WPPSI-III) Differential Ability Scales - II (DAS) at 3 years of age if the WPPSI-III score was not available at 5years. Bayley Scales of Infant Development, Third Edition (Bayley - III) at 12 months, 24months Conner’s Rating Scales - revised at 48months of age for assessment of attention | No significant differences seen with cognitive and behavioral outcomes | |
| Zhou et al. ( | Psychological Development assessment at age 6, 12, 24 months | Chinese Version of Gesell development Diagnosis Scale (GDDS) with 4 domains - motor, adaptability, language and social emotional responses | No significant difference of neurocognitive development of children between different time of initiation of therapy (before conception and after conception) | |