Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology
Endocrine Abstracts (2014) 36 P82 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.36.P82

BSPED2014 Poster Presentations (1) (88 abstracts)

An audit to assess the impact of increasing the borderline blood spot TSH cut-off on the detection of cases of congenital hypothyroidism (CHT) identified via newborn screening

Lesley Tetlow 1 , Sarah Ehtisham 2 , Beverly Hird 1 , Claire Manfredonia 1 , Daniella Nice 1 , Jonathan Scargill 1 & Caroline Steele 2


1Department of Clinical Biochemistry Central Manchester Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK; 2Department of Paediatric Endocrinology Royal Manchester Children’s Hospital, Manchester, UK.


Background: The UK Newborn Screening Programme Centre Clinical Referral Standards and Guidelines for CHT (2013) define TSH cut-offs for screen positive (>20 mU/l) and borderline (>10 and <20 mU/l) results. In Manchester levels >8 and <20 mU/l are classified as borderline. This audit aims to assess whether adopting the national cut-off would result in babies with significant and permanent hypothyroid disease being missed.

Patient population: All babies screened by the Manchester laboratory from October 2007 to April 2014,

Audit methodology: A search of the laboratory screening information system identified all babies with an initial TSH result of >8 and <10 mU/l and a repeat TSH of >8 mU/l. Diagnostic test results and details of thyroxine therapy were obtained on this cohort and in confirmed cases now >2 years of age we attempted to ascertain whether thyroxine therapy was continuing and if thyroid status had been reassessed after 4–6 weeks off therapy as guidelines recommend.

Results: 399 babies had an initial TSH of >8 mU/l and <10 mU/l and 19 of those had a valid repeat TSH >8 mU/l. A diagnosis was confirmed in 17/19 and all were commenced on Thyroxine. There was no evidence on thyroid imaging of an absent or ectopic thyroid in any of the cases. 11/19 babies are now >2 years and follow-up data has so far been obtained in 4/11. In 2/4 permanent CHT is confirmed, 1/4 was transient and has ceased thyroxine and 1/4 remains on thyroxine but has not been re-tested.

Conclusion: In Manchester adoption of the national borderline TSH cut-off would re-classify an average of three confirmed cases CHT/year as normal. Work is on-going to establish the proportion of these babies in whom hypothyroidism is permanent.

Volume 36

42nd Meeting of the British Society for Paediatric Endocrinology and Diabetes

British Society for Paediatric Endocrinology and Diabetes 

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