Title: Thyroid in pregnancy
1Thyroid in pregnancy
- Dr Ash Gargya
- Endocrinologist, RPA and Bankstown Hospitals
- VMO, Norwest and Strathfield Private Hospitals
2Maternal physiology and TSH recommendations
3Changes in maternal thyroid physiology
Concentration of hormone
- E2 ? TBG synthesis (2-fold) and sialylation ? ?
TBG plasma clearance ? ? in total T4 (and T4
binding sites) and T3 - ? volume of distribution and placental T4
transfer (accounts for 35 cord T4) - hCG has TSH-like activity ? peak 10-12 wks ? 1st
trimester ? fT4 (i.e. thyroid hormone pool) and ?
TSH (20 pregnancies) - ?GFR ? ? (2-fold) urinary iodine loss
0 10 20
30 40 Gestation (wks)
Strains the thyroid functional reserve esp if
ATA ve or iodine insufficient
4What crosses the placenta?
- T4
- TSH and T3 do not cross the placenta
- Iodine
- Anti-thyroid medications
- PTU and carbimazole
- TSH receptor antibodies
- A maternal level gt3 times ULN in the third
trimester may increase the risk of neonatal
Graves
5TSH reference ranges in pregnancy
97.5th centile
Mean
2.5th centile
9 studies between 2004-2009 ATA ve and iodine
sufficient Non-pregnant TSH reference range
(0.4-4.1)mIU/L
Glinoer D. Nat Rev Endo 2010
6Current recommendations
- Where available, use laboratory-specific and
trimester-specific reference ranges in pregnancy - When not available, aim for-
- Pre-conception TSH 0.3-2.5mIU/L
- 1st trimester TSH 0.1-2.5mIU/L
- 2nd trimester TSH 0.3-3.0mIU/L
- 3rd trimester TSH 0.3-3.0mIU/L
ATA Guidelines July 2011
7Current recommendations
- fT4 less reliable in pregnancy
- Depends on methodology (ED and MS gold standard)
- Effect of iodine insufficiency
- When is fT4 measurement useful?
- Differentiate OH from SH
- Monitoring anti-thyroid therapy
- Aim fT4 upper non-pregnant RR (i.e. 15-20pmol/L)
- Central hypothyroidism
- ALL pregnant and breastfeeding women should be on
an iodine-containing (250mcg) supplement
8Who should be screened pre-conception?
9Universal screening is currently NOT advocated
10Maternal hypothyroidism
11What are the implications of maternal
hypothyroidism?
- OVERT hypothyroidism (OH)
- Definition TSH gt2.5 with low fT4
- TSH gt10 regardless of fT4
- Obstetric associated with miscarriage, SGA,
prematurity, gestational hypertension and PPH - Fetal 7 point IQ deficit (age 7-9yo) with delays
in language, attention and motor development
untreated maternal TSHgt13 (Haddow 1999) - T4 therapy IMPROVES outcomes (obstetric and fetal)
12What are the implications of maternal
hypothyroidism?
- SUBCLINICAL hypothyroidism (SH)
- Affects 2-3 of all pregnancies
- Definition TSH 2.5-10 with normal fT4
- Obstetric associated with increase risk of
miscarriage and pre-term delivery (OR 2-2.5
across multiple studies) - Fetal no convincing evidence that SH affects
neuro-cognitive development - SCARCE evidence confirming that T4 intervention
improves outcomes (obstetric or fetal)
13Adjusting and monitoring TFT on Thyroxine
- For women with pre-existing hypothyroidism on
Thyroxine - Aim TSH 0.3-2.5 pre-conception
- Once pregnant, increase dose by 30 (usually 2
extra tablets through the week) - For athyreotic women a dose increase up to 50 is
needed - Monitor TFT 4-weekly till 20 weeks and once at
28-32 weeks - Take prenatal/Ca/Fe supplements gt3h gap from
Thyroxine - Post-delivery reduce to pre-pregnancy dose with
3-monthly monitring for 1 year - Hashimotos dose may be 20 higher 1 year
postpartum cf pre-preg
14What are the implications of positive thyroid
autoimmunity?
- Occurs in 5-15 of child-bearing women
- Positive thyroid antibodies are associated with
- SH and OH
- Postpartum thyroiditis (risk 30-50 if ve in 1st
trimester) - Increased rate of miscarriage (OR 2.73)
- ?Heightened immune dysregulation
- ?Thyroid hypofunction
- ?Increased maternal age
15What are the implications of positive thyroid
autoimmunity?
- Guidelines recommend treating with T4 if
- Euthyroid and history of recurrent miscarriage
- SH
- If euthyroid with ve ATA pre-conception
- 20 of these women will have a TSHgt4 by the 3rd
trimester - Monitor 4-6 weekly till mid-gestation (and once
at 28-32 weeks) for SH/OH - Monitor TFT 3-monthly pp - increased risk of pp
thyroiditis
16ATA guidelines 2011
17Maternal hyperthyroidism
18What are the implications of maternal
hyperthyroidism?
- Affects 0.1-0.4 of pregnancies
- 85 have Graves disease
- Other causes include hCG-mediated thyrotoxicosis
(hyperemesis gravidarum, twin pregnancy), toxic
nodule/s, thyroiditis (subacute, postpartum M/C
or delivery lt12 months), molar pregnancy - Overt hyperthyroidism associated with
miscarriage, IUGR, pre-eclampsia, preterm
delivery, thyroid storm, CCF - Subclinical hyperthyroidism is NOT associated
with adverse feto-maternal outcomes
19How to approach a low TSH in early pregnancy
- Check fT4, TRAb
- If both elevated treat with antithyroid meds
- fT3 may help confirm Graves - T3 toxicosis (DD
AFTN) - If normal fT4 and ve TRAb monitor TFT 4-weekly
and treat once overtly hyperthyroid - If normal fT4 and ve TRAb, likely hCG-mediated
thyrotoxicosis
20Graves disease in pregnancy
- Use lowest effective dose of ATD
- PTU in the 1st trimester (monitor LFT) and
carbimazole thereafter if continued therapy
required - Maintain fT4 in the upper 1/3 of non-pregnant RR
- Monitor TFT 4-weekly whilst on ATD
- Check TRAb around 28-32 weeks risk neonatal
Graves - 1/3 women can stop ATD by 3rd trimester
- High risk of relapse 4-8 months postpartum
21Summary
22Summary
- Use laboratory-specific, trimester-specific RR in
pregnancy - TSH 0.3-2.5 pre-conception and during the 1st
trimester - TSH 0.3-3.0 during the 2nd and 3rd
trimesters - If on Thyroxine, increase dose by 30-50 once
pregnant with 4-weekly monitoring in the first
half of pregnancy - ALL women should take an iodinecontaining
supplement - Maintain fT4 in upper 1/3 non-preg RR if on ATD