Publication | Closed Access
Detection of At-Risk Pregnancy by Means of Highly Sensitive Assays for Thyroid Autoantibodies
492
Citations
20
References
1990
Year
GynecologyPathologyHigh-risk PregnancyReproductive EndocrinologyPublic HealthGestational DiabetesMaternal HealthPrenatal DiagnosisAt-risk PregnancyPrenatal TestingEndocrinologyFirst TrimesterMiscarriage RateAbortionThyroid DiseaseThyroid AutoantibodiesPregnancyHighly Sensitive AssaysThyroid Peroxidase AutoantibodiesThyroid HormoneMedicine
We screened 552 women who presented to their obstetrician in the first trimester of pregnancy using highly sensitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays for the presence of thyroglobulin and thyroid peroxidase autoantibodies and found an incidence of positivity of 19.6%. The tendency to secrete detectable levels of thyroid autoantibodies was significantly correlated with an increased rate of miscarriage. Thyroid autoantibody-positive women miscarried at a rate of 17%, compared with 8.4% for the autoantibody-negative women. Individual levels of thyroglobulin and thyroid peroxidase autoantibodies were similarly related to this increased miscarriage rate, with no evidence of autoantibody specificity in the relationship. Furthermore, the increase in miscarriages could not be explained by differences in thyroid hormone levels, the presence of cardiolipin autoantibodies, maternal age, gestational age at the time of maternal entry into the study, or previous obstetric history. We conclude that thyroid autoantibodies are an independent marker of "at-risk" pregnancy.
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