| Literature DB >> 35248144 |
Maria-Cristina Burlacu1, Roberto Attanasio2, Laszlo Hegedüs3, Endre V Nagy4, Enrico Papini5, Petros Perros6, Kiswendsida Sawadogo7, Marie Bex8, Bernard Corvilain9, Chantal Daumerie10, Brigitte Decallonne8, Damien Gruson11, Bruno Lapauw12, Rodrigo Moreno Reyes13, Patrick Petrossians14, Kris Poppe15, Annick Van den Bruel16, David Unuane17.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hypothyroidism is a topic that continues to provoke debate and controversy with regards to specific indications, type of thyroid hormone substitution and efficacy. We investigated the use of thyroid hormones in clinical practice in Belgium, a country where currently only levothyroxine (LT4) tablet formulations are available.Entities:
Keywords: Hypothyroidism; Survey; Thyroid hormones
Year: 2022 PMID: 35248144 PMCID: PMC8897091 DOI: 10.1186/s13044-022-00121-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Thyroid Res ISSN: 1756-6614
Fig. 1Number of Belgian patients treated by year with thyroid hormones between 2005 and 2019. Source: National Institute of Diseases (INAMI-RIZIV, https://www.inami.fgov.be)
Demographic characteristics of the 80 participants to the survey
| Sex, n (%) | |
|---|---|
| Male | 41 (51) |
| Female | 39 (49) |
| Age, n (%) | |
| < 40 | 21 (26) |
| 40–60 | 45 (56) |
| > 60 | 14 (18) |
| Years in medical practice, n (%) | |
| < 10 | 22 (27.5) |
| 10–30 | 40 (50) |
| > 30 | 18 (22.5) |
| Specialtya, n (%) | |
| Endocrinology | 59 (74) |
| Internal Medicine | 14 (17.5) |
| Pediatric Endocrinology | 15 (19) |
| Nuclear Medicine | 8 (10) |
| Other, including Family Medicine | 2 (2.5) |
| Type of practicea, n (%) | |
| University center | 42 (52.5) |
| Regional hospital | 37 (46) |
| Private clinic | 4 (5) |
| Other, including General practice | 7 (9) |
a The sum of percentages exceeds 100% because some respondents had > 1 specialty and were employed in more than 1 place
Fig. 2Reasons for prescribing thyroid hormones in euthyroid patients. Multiple answers were possible. Columns represent the percentage of respondents who prescribe LT4 for the given condition
Fig. 3Percentage of respondents, in relation to length of clinical practice, who treat biochemically euthyroid infertile females with high levels of antithyroid antibodies or euthyroid patients with benign goiter growing over time, with thyroid hormones
Fig. 4Presumed explanations for persistent symptoms in hypothyroid patients despite achievement of a normal TSH under LT4 treatment. Participants were asked to rank the potential explanations. Higher columns represent greater presumed importance