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Risks of suboptimal and excessive thyroid hormone replacement across ages

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s40618-023-02229-7

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Hypothyroidism; Replacement; Non-communicable disease; Suboptimal treatment

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Hypothyroidism is a prevalent non-communicable disease that can have devastating consequences if not treated timely and adequately. It can lead to poor growth and development in children, compromised brain and physical function in young to middle-aged adults, and fertility issues and neurocognitive development problems in young fertile women. Both suboptimal and excessive replacement of levothyroxine (LT4) can result in various health problems, including increased cardiovascular disease burden, obesity, and poor quality of life.
BackgroundHypothyroidism is prevalent at all ages and represents a non-communicable disease with preventable consequences.MethodNarrative review.ReviewIn children and adolescents, the most devastating consequences of undertreatment with levothyroxine (LT4) are poor growth and development. Delayed treatment in congenital hypothyroidism can lead to permanent brain damage. In young to middle-aged adults, symptoms are often overlooked, and treatment delayed by many years. The resulting consequences are also at this age group compromised brain and physical function but less severe and partly reversible with treatment. The under-treated condition often results in a higher risk of, e.g., increased cardiovascular disease burden, obesity, hypertension, poor physical capacity, and poor quality of life. Excessive replacement is at all adult age groups associated with increased risk of cardiac death, osteoporosis, loss of muscle function, psychological instability and poor quality of life. In young fertile women, the consequences of undertreatment with LT4 are subnormal fertility, recurrent pregnancy loss, compromised fetal growth, and neurocognitive development. On the other hand, excessive LT4 treatment has been related to gestational hypertension, preeclampsia and preterm birth. In the elderly, care must be given to avoid confusing a slightly high age-related serum TSH with requirement for LT4 treatment in a truly hypothyroid patient. Excessive LT4 treatment in patients of high age is associated with an increased mortality.ConclusionSuboptimal and excessive LT4 replacement of the preventable non-communicable disease hypothyroidism requires more focus from the healthcare system and from the global political systems to prevent the personally devastating and socioeconomically challenging consequences.

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