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Defining Gestational Thyroid Dysfunction Through Modified Nonpregnancy Reference Intervals: An Individual Participant Meta-analysis.

Authors :
Osinga JAJ
Nelson SM
Walsh JP
Ashoor G
Palomaki GE
López-Bermejo A
Bassols J
Aminorroaya A
Broeren MAC
Chen L
Lu X
Brown SJ
Veltri F
Huang K
Männistö T
Vafeiadi M
Taylor PN
Tao FB
Chatzi L
Kianpour M
Suvanto E
Grineva EN
Nicolaides KH
D'Alton ME
Poppe KG
Alexander E
Feldt-Rasmussen U
Bliddal S
Popova PV
Chaker L
Visser WE
Peeters RP
Derakhshan A
Vrijkotte TGM
Pop VJM
Korevaar TIM
Source :
The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism [J Clin Endocrinol Metab] 2024 Oct 15; Vol. 109 (11), pp. e2151-e2158.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background: Establishing local trimester-specific reference intervals for gestational TSH and free T4 (FT4) is often not feasible, necessitating alternative strategies. We aimed to systematically quantify the diagnostic performance of standardized modifications of center-specific nonpregnancy reference intervals as compared to trimester-specific reference intervals.<br />Methods: We included prospective cohorts participating in the Consortium on Thyroid and Pregnancy. After relevant exclusions, reference intervals were calculated per cohort in thyroperoxidase antibody-negative women. Modifications to the nonpregnancy reference intervals included an absolute modification (per .1 mU/L TSH or 1 pmol/L free T4), relative modification (in steps of 5%) and fixed limits (upper TSH limit between 3.0 and 4.5 mU/L and lower FT4 limit 5-15 pmol/L). We compared (sub)clinical hypothyroidism prevalence, sensitivity, and positive predictive value (PPV) of these methodologies with population-based trimester-specific reference intervals.<br />Results: The final study population comprised 52 496 participants in 18 cohorts. Optimal modifications of standard reference intervals to diagnose gestational overt hypothyroidism were -5% for the upper limit of TSH and +5% for the lower limit of FT4 (sensitivity, .70, CI, 0.47-0.86; PPV, 0.64, CI, 0.54-0.74). For subclinical hypothyroidism, these were -20% for the upper limit of TSH and -15% for the lower limit of FT4 (sensitivity, 0.91; CI, 0.67-0.98; PPV, 0.71, CI, 0.58-0.80). Absolute and fixed modifications yielded similar results. CIs were wide, limiting generalizability.<br />Conclusion: We could not identify modifications of nonpregnancy TSH and FT4 reference intervals that would enable centers to adequately approximate trimester-specific reference intervals. Future efforts should be turned toward studying the meaningfulness of trimester-specific reference intervals and risk-based decision limits.<br /> (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1945-7197
Volume :
109
Issue :
11
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39083675
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1210/clinem/dgae528