[HTML][HTML] Maternal thyroid deficiency during pregnancy and subsequent neuropsychological development of the child

JE Haddow, GE Palomaki, WC Allan… - … England Journal of …, 1999 - Mass Medical Soc
JE Haddow, GE Palomaki, WC Allan, JR Williams, GJ Knight, J Gagnon, CE O'Heir…
New England Journal of Medicine, 1999Mass Medical Soc
Background When thyroid deficiency occurs simultaneously in a pregnant woman and her
fetus, the child's neuropsychological development is adversely affected. Whether
developmental problems occur when only the mother has hypothyroidism during pregnancy
is not known. Methods In 1996 and 1997, we measured thyrotropin in stored serum samples
collected from 25,216 pregnant women between January 1987 and March 1990. We then
located 47 women with serum thyrotropin concentrations at or above the 99.7 th percentile of …
Background
When thyroid deficiency occurs simultaneously in a pregnant woman and her fetus, the child's neuropsychological development is adversely affected. Whether developmental problems occur when only the mother has hypothyroidism during pregnancy is not known.
Methods
In 1996 and 1997, we measured thyrotropin in stored serum samples collected from 25,216 pregnant women between January 1987 and March 1990. We then located 47 women with serum thyrotropin concentrations at or above the 99.7th percentile of the values for all the pregnant women, 15 women with values between the 98th and 99.6th percentiles, inclusive, in combination with low thyroxine levels, and 124 matched women with normal values. Their seven-to-nine-year-old children, none of whom had hypothyroidism as newborns, underwent 15 tests relating to intelligence, attention, language, reading ability, school performance, and visual–motor performance.
Results
The children of the 62 women with high serum thyrotropin concentrations performed slightly less well on all 15 tests. Their full-scale IQ scores on the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children, third edition, averaged 4 points lower than those of the children of the 124 matched control women (P=0.06); 15 percent had scores of 85 or less, as compared with 5 percent of the matched control children. Of the 62 women with thyroid deficiency, 48 were not treated for the condition during the pregnancy under study. The full-scale IQ scores of their children averaged 7 points lower than those of the 124 matched control children (P=0.005); 19 percent had scores of 85 or less. Eleven years after the pregnancy under study, 64 percent of the untreated women and 4 percent of the matched control women had confirmed hypothyroidism.
Conclusions
Undiagnosed hypothyroidism in pregnant women may adversely affect their fetuses; therefore, screening for thyroid deficiency during pregnancy may be warranted.
The New England Journal Of Medicine