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      Evaluation of three thyroid-function screening tests for detecting neonatal hypothyroidism.

      Lancet
      Capillaries, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Filtration, instrumentation, Freeze Drying, Humans, Hypothyroidism, blood, diagnosis, Infant, Newborn, Infant, Newborn, Diseases, Radioimmunoassay, Thyroid Function Tests, methods, Thyrotropin, Thyroxine, Umbilical Cord

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          Abstract

          Three thyroid-function detection methods were evaluated concomitantly for possible application as routine screening tests for the early diagnosis of neonatal hypothyroidism. Dried capillary-blood thyroxine (T4) was measured on eluted filter-paper discs for 9734 3-5-day old neonates. Serum T4 and thyroid-stimulating hormone (T.S.H.) assays from cord blood were studied as alternative screening tests on 4911 and 3733 infants, respectively. To avoid false-negative results, neonatal blood-T4 and cord serum-T4 screening methods were followed up for the lower 10th and 6th percentile, respectively. This resulted in a false-positive recall incidence greater than 92% owing to various additional factors which also influence T4 levels: thyroxine-binding-globulin deficiency, prematurity, and maternal drug ingestion. In marked contrast, cord T.S.H. as an initial screening test had a higher specificity and sensitivity for the diagnosis of primary hypothyroidism with the two affected cases, having values greater than 70 muU/ml (with only 0-24% of the screened population having values greater than 50 muU/ml). In order to avoid the impracticably high recallrate and false-positive incidence resulting from an initial T4 screening test, and to reduce the estimated follow-up recall to less than 0-2% of the screened infant population, it is recommended that infants with low T4 be selected for a supplementary T.S.H. screening test.

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