Antenatal Thyroid Screening and Childhood Cognitive Function
University of Wales · Queen Mary University of London · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Children born to women with low thyroid hormone levels have been reported to have decreased cognitive function.
We conducted a randomized trial in which pregnant women at a gestation of 15 weeks 6 days or less provided blood samples for measurement of thyrotropin and free thyroxine (T(4)). Women were assigned to a screening group (in which measurements were obtained immediately) or a control group (in which serum was stored and measurements were obtained shortly after delivery). Thyrotropin levels above the 97.5th percentile, free T(4) levels below the 2.5th percentile, or both were considered a positive screening result. Women with positive findings in the screening group were assigned to 150 μg of levothyroxine per day. The primary outcome was IQ at 3 years of age in children of women with positive results, as measured by psychologists who were unaware of the group assignments.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 41.62
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 19
Authors
15Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Levothyroxine
- Confidence interval
- Thyroid function
- Percentile
- Gestational age
- Gestation
- Thyroid function tests
- Good health and well-being