Transient congenital hypothyroidism due to maternal autoimmune thyroid disease

Hormones (Athens). 2003 Apr-Jun;2(2):113-9. doi: 10.14310/horm.2002.1190.

Abstract

The neonatal screening program for congenital hypothyroidism (CH) in Greece shows an overall incidence of the disease of 1:2321. The cases with permanent CH have an incidence of 1:2542, whereas the transient forms of CH account for 8.7% of all cases diagnosed as CH. Transplacental passage of maternal thyrotropin receptor-blocking antibodies is a rare cause of transient CH. In our program, a retrospective analysis of 508,358 screened newborns revealed 6 infants with transient CH caused by maternal thyroid autoimmunity, representing 2.7% of all cases of CH. All the newborns with transient CH, due to maternal autoimmune thyroid disease, had high serum TSH concentration (ranging from 98 to 689 mU/L), whereas serum thyroxine (T4) values were low normal to normal in 3 of them. Replacement therapy with L-thyroxine was initiated at a mean age of 6.5 days. The newborns with transient CH belonged to 4 families, one of which had 4 and another 2 children with the same pathology. Thyrotropin-receptor antibodies (TSH-R Abs), present at the initial examination in newborns' serum, had disappeared from the infants' circulation by the third month of life. One mother carried the Abs for at least 8 years during which period she delivered four babies. The diagnosis of transient CH should be suspected if the mother has autoimmune thyroid disease, if there are siblings with transient CH or if there is no need for an increase in L-thyroxine dose with advancing age. The diagnosis is very important for genetic counseling, early treatment initiation of subsequent offspring and adequate control of the mother's thyroid function during subsequent pregnancies so that any neurodevelopmental abnormality of the fetus could be avoided.