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Thyroid Disease in Pregnancy Abdelrahman Al-daqqa
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Page 1: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Thyroid Disease in Pregnancy

Abdelrahman Al-daqqa

Page 2: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Physiologic Changes in Thyroid Function During Pregnancy

Thyroid binding globulin (TBG) increases due to reduced hepatic clearance and estrogenic stimulation of TBG synthesis

The test results that change in pregnancy are influenced by changes in TBG concentration

Plasma iodide levels decrease due to fetal iodide use and increased maternal clearance -> leads to notable increase in gland size in 15% of women (without abnormal TFTs)

Page 3: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Physiologic Changes in Thyroid Function During Pregnancy

Maternal Status

TSH

**initial screening

test**

Free T4 Free Thyroxine Index (FTI)

Total T4 Total T3 Resin Triiodo-

thyronine Uptake (RT3U)

Pregnancy No change

No change

No change

Increase Increase Decrease

Hyperthyroidism Decrease Increase Increase Increase Increase or no

change

Increase

Hypothyroidism Increase Decrease Decrease Decrease Decrease or no

change

Decrease

Page 4: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

The Fetal Thyroid

Begins concentrating iodine at 10-12 weeks

Controlled by pituitary TSH by approximately 20 weeks

Page 5: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Hyperthyroidism Occurs in 0.2% of

pregnancies; Graves’ disease accounts for 95% of cases

Look for:-Nervousness-Tremor-Tachycardia-Frequent stools-Sweating-Heat intolerance -Weight loss-Goiter-Insomnia-Palpitations-Hypertension-Lid lag/lid retraction-Pretibial myxedema

Page 6: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Fetal & Neonatal Effects of Hyperthyroidism

Associated with preterm delivery, low birth weight, fetal loss

Fetal thyrotoxicosis (related to disease itself or treatment)

Risk of immune-mediated hypo/hyperthyroidism (due to antibodies crossing the placenta, esp. in Graves or chronic autoimmune thyroiditis) Antibodies in Graves’ disease can be either

stimulatory or inhibitory Neonates of women with Graves’ who have been

surgically/radioactively treated are at higher risk, b/c not taking suppression

Page 7: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Causes & Diagnosis of Hyperthyroidism

Most common cause of hyperthyroidism is Graves’ disease Document elevated FT4 or elevated FTI with

suppressed TSH, in absence of goiter/mass Most patients have antibodies to TSH receptor,

antimicrosomal, or antithyroid peroxidase antibodies, but measurement of these is not required (though some endocrinologists recommend measuring TSI, which are stimulatory antibodies to TSH receptor)

Other causes: Excess TSH production, gestational trophoplastic

disease, hyperfunctioning thyroid adenoma, toxic goiter, subacute thyroiditis, extrathyroid source of TH

Page 8: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Treatment of Hyperthyroidism

Goal is to maintain FT4/FTI in high normal range using lowest possible dose (minimize fetal exposure)

Measure FT4/FTI q2-4 weeks and titrate Thioamides (PTU/methimazole) -> decrease

thyroid hormone synthesis by blocking organification of iodide PTU also reduces T4->T3 and may work more

quickly PTU traditionally preferred (older studies found

that methimazole crossed placenta more readily and was associated with fetal aplasia cutis; newer studies refute this)

Page 9: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Treatment of Hyperthyroidism

Effect of treatment on fetal thyroid function: Possible transient suppression of thyroid

function Fetal goiter associated with Graves’ (usually

drug-induced fetal hypothyroidism) Fetal thyrotoxicosis due to maternal antibodies

is rare -> screen for growth and normal FHR Neonate at risk for thyroid dysfunction; notify

pediatrician Breastfeeding safe when taking

PTU/methimazole

Page 10: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Treatment of Hyperthyroidism

Beta-blockers can be used for symptomatic relief (usually Propanolol)

Reserve thyroidectomy for women in whom thioamide treatment unsuccessful

Iodine 131 contraindicated (risk of fetal thyroid ablation especially if exposed after 10 weeks); avoid pregnancy/breastfeeding for 4 months after radioactive ablation

Page 11: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Hypothyroidism

Symptoms: fatigue, constipation, cold intolerance, muscle cramps, hair loss, dry skin, slow reflexes, weight gain, intellectual slowness, voice changes, insomnia

Can progress to myxedema and coma Subclinical hypothyroidism: elevated TSH,

normal FTI in asymptomatic patient Associated with other autoimmune

disorders Type 1 DM -> 5-8% risk of hypothyroidism; 25%

postpartum thyroid dysfunction

Page 12: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Hypothyroidism: Fetal & Neonatal Effects

Higher incidence of LBW (due to medically indicated preterm delivery, pre-eclampsia, abruption)

Iodine deficient hypothyroidism -> congenital cretinism (growth failure, mental retardation, other neuropsychological deficits)

Page 13: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Causes & Diagnosis of Hypothyroidism

Causes: Hashimoto’s (chronic thyroiditis; most common

in developed countries) & iodine deficiency -> both associated with goiter

Subacute thyroiditis -> not associated with goiter

Thyroidectomy, radioactive iodine treatment Iodine deficiency (most common worldwide;

rare in US)

Page 14: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Treatment of Hypothyroidism

Treat with Levothyroxine in sufficient dose to return TSH to normal

Adjust dosage every 4 weeks Check TSH every trimester

Page 15: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

ACOG Recommendations

Screening of all pregnant women with a personal history, physical examination, or symptoms of a thyroid disorder.

Page 16: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Rheumatoid Arthritis

Page 17: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Rheumatoid Arthritis in Pregnancy

Affects 1-2% of the general population More common in women RA in pregnancy is a common challenge Sex hormones have effects on disease activity 70-80% of cases improve during pregnancy Post-partum flare common

Page 18: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Minimal effects on fetal morbidity andmortality Steroids may increase risk of IUGR andPPROM Active disease correlates with lower birthweights

Effect of Pregnancy on RA

Page 19: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Avoid NSAIDS and high dose aspirin Low-dose aspirin safe Use lowest doses of prednisone Sulfasalazine, hydroxychloroquine inrefractory cases

Treatment of RA in Pregnancy

Page 20: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Aspirin Azathioprine Cyclosporin Cyclophosphamide Methotrexate Chlorambucil High dose prednisone

RA Medications and Breast-feeding –Avoid:

Page 21: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura

ITP

Page 22: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP)

is a clinical syndrome in which a decreased number of circulating platelets (thrombocytopenia) manifests as a

bleeding tendency, easy bruising (purpura), or extravasation of blood

from capillaries into skin and mucous membranes (petechiae). Although most cases of acute ITP, particularly in children, are mild and self-limited, intracranial hemorrhage may occur when the platelet count drops below 10 × 109/L (< 10 × 103/µL);[1] this occurs in 0.5-1% of children, and half of these cases are fatal.[2]

Page 23: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Isolated thrombocytopenia No drugs or other conditions that mayaffect platelet count Exclude HIV, Hep C, SLE

ITP – Diagnostic Criteria:

Page 24: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Increased platelet destruction Inhibition of platelet production atmegakaryocyte level Mediated by IgG Abs against plateletmembrane glycoproteins Usually a chronic condition

ITP – Pathology:

Page 25: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Petechiae, purpura, easy bruising Epistaxis, menorrhagia, bleeding from gums GIT bleeding, hematuria: rare Intracranial hemorrhage – very rare

ITP – Clinical Features:

Page 26: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

May affect fetus in up to 15% of cases Neonatal count may drop sharply several days afterbirth Difficult to differentiate from gestationalthrombocytopenia Epidurals safe if count > 50000 Prednisone +/- IVIG if count < 50000 Manage delivery according to standard obstetricpractice Avoid NSAIDS post-partum

ITP and Pregnancy

Page 27: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Incidence about 5% Occurs late in pregnancy Mild (>70 000) No fetal neonatal thrombocytopenia Postpartum resolution

Gestational Thrombocytopenia

Page 28: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Myasthenia Gravis

Page 29: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Typically presents with fluctuating skeletalmuscular weakness May be ocular or generalised May have antibodies to the AChR 10-15% have a thymoma Respiratory muscle involvement may leadto respiratory failure

Myasthenia Gravis:

Page 30: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Pregnancy has a variable effect on thecourse of MG Post-partum exacerbations in 30% Infections can trigger exacerbations Steroids can cause transient worsening MgSO4 is contraindicated

Myasthenia Gravis in Pregnancy:

Page 31: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Transplacental passage of IgG anti-AChR Neuromuscular junction disordersTransient neonatal MG in 10-20% Decreased FM’s and breathing Polyhydramnios Arthrogryposis multiplex congenita

Myasthenia Gravis – Effect on the Fetus

Page 32: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

First stage of labour not affected Second stage: expulsive efforts mayweaken Assisted vaginal delivery may be indicated Pre-labour anaesthetic assessmentindicated

Myasthenia Gravis – Labour & Delivery

Page 33: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Systemic Lupus Erythematosus

Page 34: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Severe pulmonary hypertension Restrictive lung disease Heart failure History of severe HELLP or PET Stroke within previous 6/12 Lupus flare within previous 6/12

SLE features associated with high maternal and fetal risks – pregnancy relatively contraindicated

Page 35: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Disease exacerbation Miscarriage, stillbirth IUGR, preterm labour Neonatal lupus Drugs and breast-feeding

SLE complications in pregnancy:

Page 36: Thyroid disease in pregnancy

Occurs in up to 2% of mothers with SLE Targets skin and cardiac tissue,rarely other tissues Congenital partial or complete heart block Heart block detected in utero Complete heart block: PNM of 44% Rash: erythematous annular lesions Rash clears within 6/12 Maternal dexamethasone may prevent progressionof heart block Neonatal pacemaker if HR<55

Neonatal Lupus: