Schectman J M, Pawlson L G
Department of Health Care Sciences, George Washington University Medical Center, Washington, DC 20037.
J Gen Intern Med. 1990 Jan-Feb;5(1):9-15. doi: 10.1007/BF02602302.
To determine the sensitivity and specificity of thyroxine (T4) and the cost-effectiveness of three testing strategies in the diagnosis of hypothyroidism in a primary care setting.
Primary care adult practice of a health maintenance organization.
Eight hundred sixteen consecutive patients suspected of having hypothyroidism who had both T4 and TSH tests performed.
None.
The sensitivity of a T4 cut-off of 7 micrograms/dl (90.3 nmol/L) in diagnosing primary hypothyroidism was 93% (95% confidence interval = 85-100%) and the specificity was 68% (95% confidence interval = 65-71%). The cost-effectiveness ratios of using an initial T4 or TSH test were about the same across a wide range of test characteristics and disease prevalence estimates. As the ratio of T4 to TSH test charges declines from 0.6 to 0.2, the marginal cost of the TSH-first method increases from $3,500 to $18,000 for each additional hypothyroid patient identified. Ordering both tests together was very costly compared with the single test methods ($125,000 for each additional case diagnosed) and remained so under a wide range of assumptions.
When hypothyroidism is suspected, a TSH-first testing approach is generally preferable due to its greater sensitivity and, under most assumptions, only small increment in average or marginal cost per case compared with a T4-first method.