Thyroid hormones treatment for subclinical hypothyroidism: a clinical practice guideline
- PMID: 31088853
- DOI: 10.1136/bmj.l2006
Thyroid hormones treatment for subclinical hypothyroidism: a clinical practice guideline
Abstract
Clinical question: What are the benefits and harms of thyroid hormones for adults with subclinical hypothyroidism (SCH)? This guideline was triggered by a recent systematic review of randomised controlled trials, which could alter practice.
Current practice: Current guidelines tend to recommend thyroid hormones for adults with thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) levels >10 mIU/L and for people with lower TSH values who are young, symptomatic, or have specific indications for prescribing.
Recommendation: The guideline panel issues a strong recommendation against thyroid hormones in adults with SCH (elevated TSH levels and normal free T4 (thyroxine) levels). It does not apply to women who are trying to become pregnant or patients with TSH >20 mIU/L. It may not apply to patients with severe symptoms or young adults (such as those ≤30 years old).
How this guideline was created: A guideline panel including patients, clinicians, and methodologists produced this recommendation in adherence with standards for trustworthy guidelines using the GRADE approach.
The evidence: The systematic review included 21 trials with 2192 participants. For adults with SCH, thyroid hormones consistently demonstrate no clinically relevant benefits for quality of life or thyroid related symptoms, including depressive symptoms, fatigue, and body mass index (moderate to high quality evidence). Thyroid hormones may have little or no effect on cardiovascular events or mortality (low quality evidence), but harms were measured in only one trial with few events at two years' follow-up.
Understanding the recommendation: The panel concluded that almost all adults with SCH would not benefit from treatment with thyroid hormones. Other factors in the strong recommendation include the burden of lifelong management and uncertainty on potential harms. Instead, clinicians should monitor the progression or resolution of the thyroid dysfunction in these adults. Recommendations are made actionable for clinicians and their patients through visual overviews. These provide the relative and absolute benefits and harms of thyroid hormones in multilayered evidence summaries and decision aids available in MAGIC (https://app.magicapp.org/) to support shared decisions and adaptation of this guideline.
Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions.
Conflict of interest statement
Competing interests: All authors have completed the BMJ Rapid Recommendations interests disclosure form and a detailed, contextualised description of all disclosures is reported in appendix 2 on bmj.com. As with all BMJ Rapid Recommendations, the executive team and The BMJ judged that no panel member had any relevant financial conflict of interest. Professional and academic interests are minimised as much as possible, while maintaining necessary expertise on the panel to make fully informed decisions. M Feller, M Snel, E Moutzouri, and N Rodondi participated in writing the systematic review that formed the evidence base for this guideline. JP Brito and N Singh Ospina wrote an editorial about the overuse of levothyroxine.
Comment in
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Urgent need for further research in subclinical hypothyroidism.Nat Rev Endocrinol. 2019 Sep;15(9):503-504. doi: 10.1038/s41574-019-0239-x. Nat Rev Endocrinol. 2019. PMID: 31300726 Free PMC article.
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Patient Context and Thyrotropin Levels Are Important When Considering Treatment of Subclinical Hypothyroidism.Thyroid. 2019 Oct;29(10):1359-1363. doi: 10.1089/thy.2019.0494. Epub 2019 Oct 3. Thyroid. 2019. PMID: 31489828 No abstract available.
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