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Frequency and outcomes of maternal thyroid function abnormalities in early pregnancy.

Thyroid function in pregnant women is of clinical importance considering the crucial role of thyroid hormones during fetal brain development, but the current level of evidence is insufficient to recommend for or against the routine testing of thyroid function in pregnant women. As part of this debate, it is important to evaluate the frequency of undiagnosed and untreated thyroid function abnormalities in pregnant women and to address challenges related to the biochemical assessment of maternal thyroid function in early pregnancy. A hypothesis of fetal programming by maternal thyroid disease has been proposed, but more evidence in humans is needed to extend the hypothesis and to evaluate child neurodevelopmental outcomes after in utero exposure to different abnormalities in maternal thyroid function. The nationwide registers in the Nordic countries provide unique opportunities within reproductive epidemiology to study the impact of various in utero exposures, and stored blood samples from pregnant women in nationwide birth cohorts provide a valuable source for the establishment of pregnancy specific reference ranges. This review addresses the frequency and outcomes of thyroid function abnormalities in pregnant women mainly focusing on observational studies that combine data from the Danish nationwide registers and biological specimens from the Danish National Birth Cohort. Dynamic changes in the reference range of maternal TSH and free T4 during the first trimester of pregnancy are described and discussed. A high frequency of unidentified maternal thyroid function abnormalities is illustrated, and outcomes of child neurodevelopment are evaluated according to subtypes and severity of maternal thyroid dysfunction.

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