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  Vol. 292 No. 6, August 11, 2004 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Fetal Loss Associated With Excess Thyroid Hormone Exposure

João Anselmo, MD; Dingcai Cao, PhD; Theodore Karrison, PhD; Roy E. Weiss, MD, PhD; Samuel Refetoff, MD

JAMA. 2004;292:691-695.

Context  Maternal hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism have deleterious effects on the outcome of pregnancy. While the effects of thyroid hormone (TH) deprivation on the fetus, independently from that on the mother, can be studied in infants with congenital hypothyroidism, this is not the case in those with fetal thyrotoxicosis.

Objective  To study the effects of TH excess on fetuses carried by mothers with resistance to TH (RTH) who are euthyroid despite high TH levels but who may carry normal fetuses that are exposed to high maternal hormone levels.

Design, Setting, and Participants  Retrospective study of 167 members of an Azorean family with RTH. Affected individuals had the RTH phenotype (high serum concentration of free thyroxine and triiodothyronine without suppressed thyrotropin) confirmed by genotyping to identify the Arg243->Gln mutation in the TH receptor {beta} gene.

Main Outcome Measures  Pregnancy outcome of affected mothers vs that of unaffected mothers carrying fetuses conceived by affected fathers, as well as that of unaffected first-degree relatives and outcomes from the general island population. Comparison of birth weights and blood concentrations of thyrotropin (TSH) obtained during routine neonatal screening of infants born to these 3 groups.

Results  Thirty-six couples with complete information belonged to 1 of 3 groups: affected mothers (n = 9), affected fathers (n = 9), and unaffected relatives (n = 18). Mean miscarriage rates were 22.9%, 2.0%, and 4.4%, respectively ({chi}2 = 8.66, P = .01). Affected mothers had an increased rate of miscarriage (z = 3.10, P = .002, by Wilcoxon rank-sum test). They had marginally higher than expected numbers of affected offspring, ie, 20 affected and 11 unaffected children (P = .07), while affected fathers had 15 affected and 12 unaffected children (P = .35). Unaffected infants born to affected mothers were significantly smaller than affected infants, having a mean SD score for gestational age of –1.79 (SD, 0.86) vs –0.06 (SD, 1.11) to –0.22 (SD, 0.70) for all other groups (P<.001). Only unaffected infants born to affected mothers had undetectable blood levels of TSH.

Conclusion  There was a higher rate of miscarriage in mothers affected by RTH that may have involved predominantly unaffected fetuses. The lower birth weight and suppressed levels of TSH in unaffected infants born to affected mothers indicates that the high maternal TH levels produce fetal thyrotoxicosis. These data indicate a direct toxic effect of TH excess on the fetus.


Author Affiliations: Endocrinology Unit, Hospital Divino Espírito Santo, Ponta Delgada, Azores-Portugal (Dr Anselmo); Department of Health Studies (Drs Cao and Karrison), Department of Medicine and Committees of Molecular Medicine and Nutritional Biology (Dr Weiss), and Departments of Medicine and Pediatrics and Committees on Genetics and Molecular Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, Ill (Dr Refetoff).


RELATED LETTERS

Fetal Loss Associated With Excess Thyroid Hormone Exposure
Sophie Christin-Maitre and Francoise Duron
JAMA. 2004;292(17):2085-2086.
EXTRACT | FULL TEXT  

Fetal Loss Associated With Excess Thyroid Hormone Exposure
Alice Y. Chang, Heidi Chamberlain-Shea, and Bruce Carr
JAMA. 2005;293(2):160-161.
EXTRACT | FULL TEXT  

Fetal Loss Associated With Excess Thyroid Hormone Exposure—Reply
Samuel Refetoff, Roy E. Weiss, and João Anselmo
JAMA. 2005;293(2):161.
EXTRACT | FULL TEXT  


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