Universal Screening for Hypothyroidism in 1st Trimester of Pregnancy: Where are We for Subclinical Hypothyroidism?

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/jcmsn.v18i4.49041

Abstract

Introduction
Subclinical hypothyroidism is missed to diagnose until fetal/maternal complications supervene and yet treatable if diagnose in 1st trimester. High disease prevalence and adverse pregnancy outcome concerns its timely identification & treatment to prevent, decrease or reverse the forthcoming complications. The objective of this research is to find prevalence of Subclinical hypothyroidism estimating TSH as 1st line test.
Methods
It was a descriptive cross sectional study. Sample size consisted of 153 pregnant women attending antenatal clinic & wards. TSH assessment was done at 1st visit along with antenatal testing. If TSH is ≥4mIu/ml (ATA) and ≥2.5mIU/ml (Iodine deficit area), freeT4 and thyroid perioxidase antibody test (anti-TPO) was further analyzed. Data was analyzed by using SPSS-20.
Results
A study was conducted among 153 pregnant women during their 1st trimester in the department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, College of Medical Sciences, Bharatpur, Nepal. The mean ±SD age was 26.1 ±4.38 years, mean ±SD gestational age was 7.6±1.35 weeks and mean ±SD body mass index (BMI) was 23.1±2.46. Thirteen percent subjects had TSH ≥4 mIU/L & 35% had TSH≥2.5mIU/ml above the cutoff used for definition of hypothyroidism. Anti Thyroid perioxidase (Anti-TPO) test positive were 47.6% (TSH≥4mIU/ml)
Conclusions
Subclinical hypothyroidism is highly prevalent in population visiting our hospital, so a universal screening with TSH estimation will be cost worthy in our area to intervene early before feto/maternal complications supervene.

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Author Biographies

Subha Shrestha, College of Medical Sciences, Bharatpur, Kathmandu University (KU)

Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology

 

Buddhi Kumar Shrestha, College of Medical Sciences, Bharatpur, Kathmandu University (KU)

Department Of Obstetrics and Gynecology

Manisha Acharya, College of Medical Sciences, Bharatpur, Kathmandu University (KU)

Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology

Puja Baniya, College of Medical Sciences, Bharatpur, Kathmandu University (KU)

Department Of Obstetrics and Gynecology

Bhagirathi Kayastha, College of Medical Sciences, Bharatpur, Kathmandu University (KU)

Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology

Sabin Lamsal, College of Medical Sciences, Bharatpur, Kathmandu University (KU)

Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology

Prateek Lekhak, College of Medical Sciences, Bharatpur, Kathmandu University (KU)

Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology

Praju Khatiwada, College of Medical Sciences, Bharatpur, Kathmandu University (KU)

Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology

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Published

2023-02-08

How to Cite

Shrestha, S., Shrestha, B. K., Acharya, M., Baniya, P., Kayastha, B., Lamsal, S., Lekhak, P., & Khatiwada, P. (2023). Universal Screening for Hypothyroidism in 1st Trimester of Pregnancy: Where are We for Subclinical Hypothyroidism?. Journal of College of Medical Sciences-Nepal, 18(4), 432–439. https://doi.org/10.3126/jcmsn.v18i4.49041

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Original Articles