Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Monitoring Thyroid Function in Patients on Levothyroxine. Assessment of Conformity to National Guidance and Variability in Practice

Scargill, Jonathan J.; Livingston, Mark; Holland, David; Duff, Christopher J.; Fryer, Anthony A.; Heald, Adrian H.

Authors

Jonathan J. Scargill

Mark Livingston

David Holland

Christopher J. Duff

Adrian H. Heald



Contributors

Abstract

With demand for endocrine tests steadily increasing year-on-year, we examined thyroid function test (TFT) frequencies in patients on levothyroxine replacement therapy to assess the effect of initial TFT results and request source on TFT re-testing interval. All TFTs performed by the Clinical Biochemistry Departments at the Salford Royal Hospital (2009-2012; 288 263 requests from 139 793 patients) and University Hospital of North Midlands (2011-2014; 579 156 requests from 193 035 patients) were extracted from the laboratory computer systems. Of these, 54 894 tests were on 13 297 patients confirmed to be on levothyroxine therapy in the test cohort (Salford) and 67 298 requests on 11 971 patients in the confirmatory cohort (North Midlands). In the test cohort, median TFT re-testing interval in the total group was 19.1 weeks (IQR 9.1-37.7 weeks), with clearly defined peaks in TFT re-testing evident at 6 and 12 months and a prominent broad peak at 1-3 months. Median re-test interval was much lower than recommended (52 weeks) for those with normal TFTs at 31.3 weeks (30.6 weeks for the confirmatory cohort). Where thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) was elevated and free thyroxine (fT4) was below the reference range, re-test interval was much longer than is recommended (8 weeks) at 13.4-17.6 weeks (7.1-23.4 weeks in the confirmatory cohort), as was the interval when TSH was below and fT4 was above the normal range, at 16.7-25.6 weeks (27.5-31.9 weeks in the confirmatory cohort). Our findings show that the majority of TFT requests are requested outside recommended intervals and within-practice variability is high. A new approach to ensuring optimum monitoring frequency is required. Direct requesting from the clinical laboratory may provide one such solution.

Citation

Scargill, J. J., Livingston, M., Holland, D., Duff, C. J., Fryer, A. A., & Heald, A. H. (2017). Monitoring Thyroid Function in Patients on Levothyroxine. Assessment of Conformity to National Guidance and Variability in Practice. Experimental and Clinical Endocrinology and Diabetes, 125(9), 625-633. https://doi.org/10.1055/s-0043-103018

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Feb 2, 2017
Online Publication Date Apr 13, 2017
Publication Date 2017-10
Deposit Date Aug 15, 2023
Journal EXPERIMENTAL AND CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY & DIABETES
Print ISSN 0947-7349
Publisher Thieme Gruppe
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 125
Issue 9
Pages 625-633
DOI https://doi.org/10.1055/s-0043-103018
PMID 28407667