Mandel Susan J, Spencer Carole A, Hollowell Joseph G
Division of Endocrinology, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Thyroid. 2005 Jan;15(1):44-53. doi: 10.1089/thy.2005.15.44.
A workshop entitled, "The Impact of Maternal Thyroid Diseases on the Developing Fetus: Implications for Diagnosis, Treatment, and Screening," was held in Atlanta, Georgia, January 12-13, 2004. The workshop was sponsored jointly by The National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities of The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and The American Thyroid Association. This paper reports on the individual session that examined the ability to detect and treat thyroid dysfunction during pregnancy. For this session, presented papers included: "Laboratory Reference Values in Pregnancy" and "Criteria for Diagnosis and Treatment of Hypothyroidism in Pregnancy." These presentations were formally discussed by invited respondents and by others in attendance. Salient points from this session about which there was agreement include the following: thyrotropin (TSH) can be used as marker for hypothyroidism in pregnancy, except when there is iodine deficiency usually evidenced by elevated serum thyroglobulin (Tg). We need more longitudinal studies of TSH during pregnancy in iodine-sufficient populations without evidence of autoimmune thyroid disease to develop trimester-specific TSH reference ranges. Current free thyroxine (FT4) estimate methods are sensitive to abnormal binding-protein states such as pregnancy. There is no absolute FT4 value that will define hypothyroxinemia across methods. Total thyroxine (TT4) changes in pregnancy are predictable and not method-specific. TT4 below 100 nmol/L (7.8 microg/dL) is a reasonable indicator of hypothyroxinemia in pregnancy. Women with known hypothyroidism and receiving levothyroxine (LT4) before pregnancy should plan to increase their dosage by 30% to 60% early in pregnancy. Women with autoimmune thyroid disease prior to pregnancy are at increased risk for thyroid insufficiency during pregnancy and postpartum thyroiditis and should be monitored with TSH during pregnancy.
2004年1月12日至13日,一场名为“母体甲状腺疾病对发育中胎儿的影响:对诊断、治疗和筛查的启示”的研讨会在佐治亚州亚特兰大市举行。该研讨会由疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)的国家出生缺陷与发育障碍中心和美国甲状腺协会联合主办。本文报告了探讨孕期甲状腺功能障碍检测与治疗能力的单独会议情况。在本次会议上,发表的论文包括:“孕期实验室参考值”和“孕期甲状腺功能减退症的诊断与治疗标准”。受邀的回应者和其他与会者对这些报告进行了正式讨论。本次会议达成共识的要点如下:促甲状腺激素(TSH)可作为孕期甲状腺功能减退症的标志物,但碘缺乏(通常表现为血清甲状腺球蛋白(Tg)升高)时除外。我们需要对碘充足、无自身免疫性甲状腺疾病证据人群的孕期TSH进行更多纵向研究,以制定各孕期特定的TSH参考范围。当前游离甲状腺素(FT4)估算方法对孕期等异常结合蛋白状态敏感。不同方法之间不存在能定义低甲状腺素血症的绝对FT4值。孕期总甲状腺素(TT4)变化是可预测的,且不具有方法特异性。孕期TT4低于100 nmol/L(7.8 μg/dL)是低甲状腺素血症的合理指标。已知患有甲状腺功能减退症且在孕前接受左甲状腺素(LT4)治疗的女性,应计划在孕早期将剂量增加30%至60%。孕前患有自身免疫性甲状腺疾病的女性在孕期和产后发生甲状腺功能不全及产后甲状腺炎的风险增加,孕期应通过TSH进行监测。