Is annual surveillance of all treated hypothyroid patients necessary?

Ananth K Viswanath, Alison Avenell, Sam Philip, Shamsunder H Acharya, Graeme Maclennan, Katherine Dalziel, Olivia Pereira, Shirley A Copland, John S Bevan, Prakash Abraham

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Citations (Scopus)
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Abstract

Background
Annual surveillance (with thyroid function testing) is widely recommended for the long-term follow-up of treated hypothyroid patients. It is based largely on consensus opinion and there is limited evidence to support the frequency of monitoring. The majority of patients in our hospital based thyroid register are on 18 monthly follow-up.

Methods
We carried out a retrospective analysis to see if there is evidence to support more frequent testing. We used a logistic regression model to assess whether any baseline characteristics could be applied to predict an abnormal test.

Results
We identified 2,125 patients with a minimum of 10 years follow-up (89% female, 65% autoimmune hypothyroidism, and mean age at registration 51 years). There were 2 groups: 1182 (56%) had been allocated to 18 monthly follow-up and the rest had annual surveillance. The groups were well matched at baseline. Overall, during follow-up the 12 monthly group had more abnormal tests requiring dose adjustment. However, on logistic regression analysis, people aged less than 60 years, individuals taking < 150 µg thyroxine per day and people on 18 monthly follow-up had less abnormal tests.

Conclusion
18 monthly surveillance may be adequate in the long term follow-up of hypothyroid patients less than 60 years of age on a stable thyroxine dose of 100–150 µg/day where there are robust follow-up mechanisms in place. Implementing this strategy has potential for cost saving.
Original languageEnglish
Article number4
Number of pages5
JournalBMC Endocrine Disorders
Volume7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2 Jul 2007

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