Dew Rosie, Okosieme Onyebuchi, Dayan Colin, Eligar Vinay, Khan Ishrat, Razvi Salman, Pearce Simon, Wilkes Scott
University of Sunderland, City Campus, Chester Road, Sunderland, SR1 3SD, UK.
Prince Charles Hospital, Cwm Taf University Health Board, Merthyr Tydfil, CF47 9DT, UK.
Syst Rev. 2017 Mar 21;6(1):60. doi: 10.1186/s13643-017-0457-z.
Suboptimal thyroid hormone therapy including under-replacement and over-replacement is common amongst patients with hypothyroidism. This is a significant health concern as affected patients are at risk of adverse cardiovascular or metabolic consequences. Despite a growing body of evidence on the effects of various factors on thyroid hormone replacement, a systematic appraisal of the evidence is lacking. This review aims to appraise and quantify the extent to which clinical, behavioural and pharmacogenomic factors affect levothyroxine therapy in patients with primary hypothyroidism.
METHODS/DESIGN: The databases Web of Science, Cochrane Library, EMBASE and PubMed will be searched. Patients must be adults over the age of 18 years, suffering from primary hypothyroidism including overt and subclinical hypothyroidism and receiving levothyroxine treatment. Studies in children, pregnant women and patients with secondary or tertiary hypothyroidism will not be included. We will also exclude studies focused on forms of thyroid hormone replacement therapy other than levothyroxine. The primary outcome is to quantify the effect of clinical, behavioural and pharmacogenomic factors on thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) levels. Secondary outcomes are the effect these factors have on thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3) levels, mortality, morbidity, quality of life, treatment complications, adverse effects, physical and social functioning. Studies will be screened through reading the title, abstract and then full text. Two reviewers will independently extract the data and select articles, and a third reviewer will be consulted if there is any disagreement. We will undertake a meta-analysis of studies in which there is a defined intervention or exposure, patients are receiving levothyroxine for hypothyroidism, there is an appropriate control group of levothyroxine treated patients that are not exposed to the intervention, and the primary outcome is determined by serum TSH levels. Studies will comprise of randomised controlled trials as well as observational data. Eligible studies will be assessed for bias using the risk of bias tool available in the Cochrane handbook 2011, and the quality of evidence will be judged according to the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) approach. A flow diagram describing the data search will be created according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis: The PRISMA statement. A narrative synthesis will be undertaken in the description of the data, and summary tables will be created of the results.
This review will be the first systematic review of this nature. The evidence synthesised will be useful to general practitioners in their management of hypothyroidism. Findings will be disseminated at conferences and in professional and peer-reviewed journals.
PROSPERO CRD42015027211.
甲状腺激素替代治疗欠佳,包括替代不足和替代过度,在甲状腺功能减退患者中很常见。这是一个重大的健康问题,因为受影响的患者有发生心血管或代谢不良后果的风险。尽管关于各种因素对甲状腺激素替代作用的证据越来越多,但仍缺乏对这些证据的系统评估。本综述旨在评估和量化临床、行为和药物基因组学因素对原发性甲状腺功能减退患者左甲状腺素治疗的影响程度。
方法/设计:将检索科学网、考克兰图书馆、EMBASE和PubMed数据库。患者必须是18岁以上的成年人,患有原发性甲状腺功能减退,包括显性和亚临床甲状腺功能减退,并接受左甲状腺素治疗。儿童、孕妇以及继发性或三发性甲状腺功能减退患者的研究将不包括在内。我们还将排除关注左甲状腺素以外其他形式甲状腺激素替代疗法的研究。主要结局是量化临床、行为和药物基因组学因素对促甲状腺激素(TSH)水平的影响。次要结局是这些因素对甲状腺素(T4)和三碘甲状腺原氨酸(T3)水平、死亡率、发病率、生活质量、治疗并发症、不良反应、身体和社会功能的影响。将通过阅读标题、摘要然后全文来筛选研究。两名评审员将独立提取数据并选择文章,如果有任何分歧将咨询第三名评审员。对于有明确干预或暴露、患者因甲状腺功能减退接受左甲状腺素治疗、有未暴露于干预的左甲状腺素治疗患者的适当对照组且主要结局由血清TSH水平决定的研究,我们将进行荟萃分析。研究将包括随机对照试验以及观察性数据。将使用2011年考克兰手册中可用的偏倚风险工具评估符合条件的研究的偏倚,并根据推荐分级评估、制定与评价(GRADE)方法判断证据质量。将根据系统评价和荟萃分析的首选报告项目:PRISMA声明创建描述数据搜索的流程图。将对数据描述进行叙述性综合,并创建结果汇总表。
本综述将是此类首次系统综述。综合的证据将有助于全科医生管理甲状腺功能减退。研究结果将在会议以及专业和同行评审期刊上发表。
PROSPERO CRD42015027211。