Reuters Health Information: Antithyroid drugs should be avoided early in pregnancy: study
Antithyroid drugs should be avoided early in pregnancy: study
Last Updated: 2016-02-11
By Will Boggs MD
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - The use of antithyroid drugs
should be avoided in early pregnancy to reduce the likelihood of
birth defects, researchers from Denmark report.
"Physicians treating young women with antithyroid drugs
should be aware of the importance of a possible future
pregnancy," Dr. Stine Linding Andersen and Dr. Peter Laurberg
from Aalborg University Hospital told Reuters Health by email.
"It is mandatory to discuss with such women that pregnancy
should be detected as early as possible."
Hyperthyroidism can adversely affect the health of pregnant
women and the development of the fetus, but its treatment with
antithyroid drugs in early pregnancy can cause birth defects.
Current guidelines favor the use of propylthiouracil (PTU) in
early pregnancy, then switching to methimazole/carbamizole
(MMI/CMZ) later in pregnancy.
Dr. Andersen and colleagues used data from the Danish
Medical Birth Register, the Danish National Prescription
Register, and the Danish National Hospital Register to examine
the frequency of birth defects, agranulocytosis, and liver
failure associated with the use of these drugs in the general
population and in pregnant women.
Of nearly 30,000 individuals prescribed antithyroid drugs,
most received MMI/CMZ (n=27,281) and far fewer received PTU
(n=5,895).
MMI-associated side effects in the general population were
twice as common as PTU-associated side effects, but this related
to the nearly five-times more frequent use of MMI, according to
the January 27 online report in the Journal of Clinical
Endocrinology and Metabolism.
The frequency of agranulocytosis was significantly higher
with PTU (0.27%) than with MMI/CMZ (0.11%, p=0.02), whereas the
frequency of liver failure did not differ significantly between
PTU (0.05%) and MMI/CMZ (0.03%, p=0.4).
Antithyroid drug-associated agranulocytosis and liver
failure were less common in pregnant women (five and five
cases/10,000 exposed to antithyroid drugs, respectively) than in
the general population (16 and three cases/10,000 exposed,
respectively).
Seventy-five children had birth defects associated with
maternal use of antithyroid drugs in 2,206 pregnancies (a rate
of 340 cases/10,000 exposed).
"We advise women who are treated with antithyroid drugs to
buy and have self-administered pregnancy tests (only a few
dollars per test) and to perform such test if pregnancy is a
possibility," Dr. Andersen and Dr. Laurberg said. "If a
pregnancy test is positive, the woman should contact her thyroid
physician and take no more antithyroid drugs before such
contact."
"If the physician considers that the woman is in remission
of hyperthyroidism, we recommend to observe without antithyroid
drug therapy and to perform weekly control of thyroid function
tests until the second trimester of pregnancy," they explained.
"If antithyroid drug therapy is considered necessary in
early pregnancy, we recommend the use of PTU. If pregnancy is
planned, it can be considered to change to PTU therapy even
before pregnancy. If treatment is considered necessary after the
first trimester of pregnancy, the physician can either continue
PTU therapy or shift the woman to MMI/CMZ," they advised.
"The early pregnancy period is just as important for the
thyroid physician as the late pregnancy is for the
obstetrician," Dr. Andersen and Dr. Laurberg concluded.
"Untreated hyperthyroidism may seriously complicate a pregnancy
and should always be carefully managed and controlled. However,
focus on early detection of pregnancy in women who are treated
with antithyroid drugs and evaluation of the clinical indication
for the use of antithyroid drugs in early pregnancy may reduce
the burden of severe side effects to these drugs in a
population."
The authors reported no external funding or disclosures.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1KHYWva
J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2016.
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