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Review
. 2020 Feb;27(1):63-69.
doi: 10.1097/MED.0000000000000520.

Update on congenital hypothyroidism

Affiliations
Review

Update on congenital hypothyroidism

Christine E Cherella et al. Curr Opin Endocrinol Diabetes Obes. 2020 Feb.

Abstract

Purpose of review: The present review summarizes recent advances in the diagnosis and management of patients with congenital hypothyroidism.

Recent findings: Although most newborn screening strategies are designed to detect severe primary hypothyroidism that presents shortly after birth, some infants display a pattern of delayed TSH rise despite normal initial newborn screening. Recent studies suggest that delayed TSH rise may be more common and more severe than previously recognized. Although much less common than primary hypothyroidism, central congenital hypothyroidism is as likely to be of moderate or severe degree, which has implications for its detection and treatment. The discovery of new genetic causes of central congenital hypothyroidism, including the X-linked genes IGSF1, TBL1X, and IRS4, has begun to expand our understanding of thyroid axis regulation. Recent long-term data indicate that current treatment recommendations for congenital hypothyroidism result in grossly normal neurocognitive outcomes even in severely affected patients, and that overtreatment may not be as harmful as previously suspected. Liquid levothyroxine is now commercially available in the United States, but more studies are needed to determine optimal dosing using this formulation.

Summary: Prompt identification and adequate treatment of patients with congenital hypothyroidism is critical to optimize outcomes. New information continues to accumulate about how to improve detection of congenital hypothyroidism in specific subgroups of infants (particularly those with delayed TSH rise and central hypothyroidism) and about treatment of patients with this disorder.

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References

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