Identifying elevated plasma free triiodothyronine levels: age-adapted reference intervals for pediatrics

Journal of Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism(2023)

Cited 22|Views8
No score
Abstract
Abstract Objectives Elevated free T3 (FT3) is an important feature for the early diagnosis of several diseases among which Grave’s disease or Allan-Hernon-Dudley syndrome. However, there is a lack of age-adapted reference intervals for plasma thyroid hormones in children. We conducted a study to define reference values of peripheral FT3 in children using a commonly used automated immunoassay. Methods All thyroid function test (TFT) results from our lab collected during 9 months were extracted anonymously, and reference intervals establishment followed recommendations validated by International Federation of Clinical Chemistry (IFCC). Results We defined five reference intervals covering the whole pediatric period. Overall, 26.1% of peripheral FT3 measured in children with normal TSH are out of the adult reference range, and 22.2% are upper it leading to misinterpretation. In a 9-month old patient with severe neurodevelopmental disorders, a pathological elevated FT3 has been securely interpreted using the newly established interval. Conclusions The study highlights the poor relevance of adult intervals in pediatric cares, as it confirms that plasmatic FT3 is higher during the whole pediatric period. This work reports useful age-adapted reference intervals for free T3 in pediatrics using a widely used electrochemiluminescent Immunoassay (ECLIA) kit.
More
Translated text
Key words
Allan-Hernon-Dudley syndrome,FT3,pediatric,reference intervals,thyroid function
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined