1. Long-term Surveillance of Children with Congenital Hypothyroidism: Data from the German Registry for Congenital Hypothyroidism (AQUAPE "Hypo Dok").
- Author
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Ellerbroek VL, Bonfig W, Dörr HG, Bettendorf M, Hauffa B, Fricke-Otto S, Rohrer T, Reschke F, Schönau E, Schwab KO, Kapelari K, Röhl FW, Mohnike K, and Holl RW
- Subjects
- Congenital Hypothyroidism diagnosis, Female, Germany, Guideline Adherence, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Intelligence drug effects, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Neonatal Screening, Quality Assurance, Health Care, Treatment Outcome, Congenital Hypothyroidism drug therapy, Long-Term Care, Registries, Software, Thyroxine therapeutic use
- Abstract
Background: The German study group for quality assurance in pediatric endocrinology and the University of Ulm have established a software ("Hypo Dok") for the documentation of longitudinal data of patients with congenital primary hypothyroidism (CH). Aim of this study was to analyse the long-term follow-up of patients with CH and to compare treatment with current guidelines., Methods/patients: Anonymised data of 1,080 patients from 46 centres were statistically analysed., Results: Newborn screening result was available at a mean age of 7.3 days. Confirmation of the diagnosis was established at 8.4 days and therapy was started at 11 days. The average screening TSH was 180.0 mIU/L. During the first 3 months mean levothyroxine (LT4) dose was 10.7 µg/kg/day or 186.0 µg/m²/day. Weight-, BMI- and height-SDS did not differ significantly from the normal population. Only 25% of the patients (n=262) underwent formal EQ/IQ-testing. Their average IQ was 98.8 ± 13.2 points., Discussion: In Germany screening, confirmation and start of treatment of CH are within the recommended time frame of 14 days. Initial LT4-doses are adequate. The auxological longterm outcome of young CH patients is normal. The implementation of standardized IQ testing has to be improved in routine patient care., Conclusion: Longitudinal data of patients with CH was analysed and compared to current guidelines. Confirmation and start of treatment are according to the recommendations. However standardised IQ testing requires improvement., (© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.)
- Published
- 2015
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