Assessment of Thyroid Function During First-Trimester Pregnancy: What Is the Rational Upper Limit of Serum TSH During the First Trimester in Chinese Pregnant Women?

Chenyan Li(Dalian Medical University), Zhongyan Shan(First Hospital of China Medical University), Jinyuan Mao(First Hospital of China Medical University), Weiwei Wang(First Hospital of China Medical University), Xiaochen Xie(First Hospital of China Medical University), Weiwei Zhou(Shenyang First People's Hospital), Chenyang Li(Dalian Medical University), Bin Xu(Shenyang 242 Hospital), Lihua Bi, Tao Meng(First Hospital of China Medical University), Jianling Du(Dalian Medical University), Shaowei Zhang(People's Liberation Army 401 Hospital), Zhengnan Gao(Dalian Medical University), Xiaomei Zhang(The First People's Hospital of Guiyang), Yang Liu, Chenling Fan(First Hospital of China Medical University), Weiping Teng(First Hospital of China Medical University)
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
November 26, 2013
Cited by 246Open Access
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Abstract

CONTEXT: Guidelines of the American Thyroid Association (ATA) proposed that the upper limit of the TSH reference range should be 2.5 mIU/L in first trimester, but the reported ranges in China are significantly higher. OBJECTIVE: Our objective was to establish a rational reference range of serum TSH for diagnosis of subclinical hypothyroidism in the first trimester of pregnant women in China. DESIGN: We screened 4800 pregnant women in the first trimester and 2000 women who planned to become pregnant and evaluated 535 pregnant women in follow-up visits during the second and third trimester. RESULTS: Median concentrations of serum TSH decreased significantly from the seventh week of gestation. The median of TSH from 4 to 6 weeks was significantly higher than from 7 to 12 weeks (2.15 [0.56-5.31] mIU/L vs 1.47 [0.10-4.34] mIU/L, P<.001); however, there was no significant difference compared with nonpregnant women (2.07 [0.69-5.64] mIU/L; P=.784). The median of free T4 was not significantly altered in the first trimester. The prevalence of subclinical hypothyroidism in the 4800 pregnant women was 27.8% on the diagnostic criteria of TSH>2.5 mIU/L and 4.0% using the reference interval derived by our laboratory (0.14-4.87 mIU/L).Additionally, of 118 pregnant women who had serum TSH>2.5 mIU/L in the first trimester, only 30.0% and 20.3% of them at the 20th and 30th week of gestation had TSH>3.0 mIU/L. CONCLUSIONS: The reference range for nonpregnant women can be used for the assessment of pregnant women at 4 to 6 weeks of gestation. The upper limit of serum TSH in the first trimester was much higher than 2.5 mIU/L in Chinese pregnant women.


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