Abnormalities of maternal thyroid function during pregnancy affect neuropsychological development of their children at 25–30 months

Yuanbin Li(First Hospital of China Medical University), Zhongyan Shan(Institute of Endocrinology), Weiping Teng(Institute of Endocrinology), Xiaohui Yu, Yushu Li(Institute of Endocrinology), Chenling Fan(Institute of Endocrinology), Xiaochun Teng(Institute of Endocrinology), Rui Guo(Institute of Endocrinology), Wang Hong(Institute of Endocrinology), Jia Li, Yanyan Chen, Weiwei Wang, Masauso Chawinga, Li Zhang(First Hospital of China Medical University), Yang Liu(First Hospital of China Medical University), Yaru Zhao(China Medical University), Tianyi Hua(China Medical University)
Clinical Endocrinology
October 31, 2009
Cited by 449

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To examine the relationship between specific thyroid abnormalities (subclinical hypothyroidism, hypothyroxinaemia or elevated thyroid peroxidase antibody titres) in women during pregnancy and the subsequent neuropsychological development of their offspring. DESIGN/PATIENTS: Serum was collected from 1268 women at 16-20 weeks of gestation and thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH), total thyroxine (tT(4)), free thyroxine (fT(4)), and Thyroid peroxidase antibodies (TPOAb) levels were measured. Thyroid function reference ranges specific for pregnancy were used to screen for thyroid abnormalities. Patients with isolated subclinical hypothyroidism (18 cases), hypothyroxinaemia (19 cases), and those who were euthyroid patients with elevated titres of TPOAb (34 cases) were identified. One hundred and forty-two euthyroid and TPOAb-negative women matched for gestational age from the same cohort were selected as controls. MEASUREMENTS: Intellectual and motor development score evaluations were performed on the children from the pregnancies at 25-30 months of age. RESULTS: Children of women with subclinical hypothyroidism, hypothyroxinemia and elevated TPOAb titres had mean intelligence scores 8.88, 9.30 and 10.56 points lower than those of the control group (P = 0.008, P = 0.004 and P = 0.001, respectively); mean motor scores were 9.98, 7.57 and 9.03 points lower than those of the controls [P < 0.001, P = 0.007 and P < 0.001, respectively (t-test)]. Unconditional multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that increased maternal serum TSH, decreased maternal serum tT(4), and elevated maternal TPOAb titres were separately associated with lower intelligence scores (ORs 15.63, 12.98, and 6.69, respectively) and poorer motor scores (ORs 9.23, 5.52, and 8.25, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Intellectual and motor development of children at 25-30 months of age is separately associated with abnormalities of maternal thyroid at 16-20 weeks gestation. Maternal subclinical hypothyroidism, hypothyroxinaemia or euthyroidism with elevated TPOAb titres were all statistically significant predictors of lower motor and intellectual development at 25-30 months.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis