PEDIATRICS Vol. 63 No. 2 February 1979, pp. 180-191
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Neonatal Hypothyroidism Detected by the Northwest Regional Screening Program

Stephen H. LaFranchi M.D.1, William H. Murphey Ph.D.1, Thomas P. Foley Jr. M.D.1, P. Reed Larsen M.D.1, and Neil R.M. Buist F.R.C.P.(E)1

1 Department of Pediatrics, University of Oregon Health Sciences Center, Portland, the Public Health Laboratory, State of Oregon, Portland, the Department of Pediatrics, Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, and the Thyroid Unit, Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston

The Northwest Regional Screening Program to detect congenital hypothyroidism in infants born in Oregon, Montana, Alaska, and Idaho (combined birthrate of 69,000/yr) was added to our ongoing screening program in 1975. The program utilizes dried blood filter paper specimens collected routinely in the first few days of life in all four states and again at about 6 weeks of age in Oregon only. The screening tests consist of an initial thyroxine (T4) measurement; a thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) determination is performed on those specimens with T4 concentrations in the lowest 3% group. Serum samples obtained by venipuncture are requested for confirmation of the diagnosis. In the first two years of the program, 25 infants with primary hypothyroidism were detected among 110,667 infants screened, a frequency of 1:4,430. Fourteen cases of thyroxine-binding globulin deficiency were also detected, a frequency of 1:7,900. Using the T4 followed by TSH testing approach, the frequency of requests for repeat specimens was 0.4% in Oregon and 0.05% in the other states. The cost per specimen was $1.96. The majority of infants lacked clinical signs or symptoms of hypothyroidism; only one infant was clinically suspected of having hypothyroidism prior to detection. The most common neonatal symptoms were constipation, lethargy, and prolonged jaundice, while the most common physical signs were hypotonia, umbilical hernia, and large fontanels. Thyroid scans showed the most common etiology to be thyroid aplasia, followed by an ectopic gland, hypoplasia, and goitèr. Serum T4 concentrations were lowest in those infants with aplasia, intermediate in infants with an ectopic gland or hypoplasia, and normal in the infant with the goiter. Neonatal hypothyroidism varies in degree and has several different causes; the capacity to secrete thyroid hormone, the duration before hypothyroidism becomes clinically manifest, and possibly the eventual prognosis for intellectual function depend on the nature of the underlying cause. While the mean age at treatment was 59 days, the goal of diagnosing congenital hypothyroidism and treating affected infants by 1 month of age seems realistic.

Submitted on January 23, 1978
Accepted on July 11, 1978