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Technical Briefs |
1
Departments of Biostatistics and Medicine and
2
Division of Endocrinology, Department of Medicine, Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115;
a address correspondence to this author at: Department of Biostatistics, Children's Hospital, 300 Longwood Ave., Boston, MA 02115
Thyroid function tests provide information about hormone metabolism and thyroid dysfunction. Reference intervals enable clinicians to evaluate thyroid function. Several pediatric reference intervals for thyroid function tests have been published(1)(2)(3)(4). Laboratory tests and their nomenclature have been published (5), and the American Thyroid Association has classified thyrotropin (TSH) as the best single measurement of thyroid status because of its high sensitivity (6). However, reference intervals that are derived from small numbers of patients are not reliable for accurately evaluating test results that are dependent on covariates such as age and sex. The IFCC has recommended a minimum of 120 subjects for nonparametric methods in which subgrouping of data is performed (7). Virtanen et al. (8) have proposed that a smaller sample size may be sufficient for regression-based reference intervals.
Recently, there has been much interest in using hospital databases to extract large volumes of patient data for clinical research(9)(10)(11)(12). Hospital databases provide a sufficient number of subjects for evaluating age and sex differences and for establishing age- and sex-based reference intervals. Test results can be affected by medications or treatment received by patients for thyroid disease that alter the physiologic features of the thyroid hormone concentrations during the neonatal period (13)(14). Therefore, neonates and patients who have thyroid disease or demonstrate abnormal test results should be excluded from the analysis used to establish the reference intervals.
Here we report health-related reference intervals for serum thyroxine
(T4), triiodothyronine (T3), TSH, and free T4
to be used as clinical guidelines for screening patients with suspected
thyroid dysfunction. These pediatric norms are more accurate than those
previously published because they are age- and
Acknowledgments
Footnotes
References
The following articles in journals at HighWire Press have cited this article:
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J. G. Hollowell, N. W. Staehling, W. D. Flanders, W. H. Hannon, E. W. Gunter, C. A. Spencer, and L. E. Braverman Serum TSH, T4, and Thyroid Antibodies in the United States Population (1988 to 1994): National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III) J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab., February 1, 2002; 87(2): 489 - 499. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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S. A. Huang, H. M. Tu, J. W. Harney, M. Venihaki, A. J. Butte, H. P.W. Kozakewich, S. J. Fishman, and P. R. Larsen Severe Hypothyroidism Caused by Type 3 Iodothyronine Deiodinase in Infantile Hemangiomas N. Engl. J. Med., July 20, 2000; 343(3): 185 - 189. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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