With the current clinical method for the treatment of hypothyroidism the target for the optimum individual values for free thyroxine concentrations [FT4] and thyrotropine concentrations [TSH] of the specific patient are unknown. This situation leads to unnecessary long experimental medication administration that can take a period of sometimes one year. In this article a method will be described where hypothyroid patients are characterized with weekly measured FT4 and TSH concentrations during the first three weeks of synthetic thyroxine or levothyroxine (L-T4) treatment to predict their optimum [FT4] and belonging [TSH] endpoint for a euthyroid homeostatic state. The treatment with levothyroxine will start for all patients with a reference dose of 100 µg, which can be adjusted by the treating physician to a more safe and appropriate dose for the individual which is monitored with weekly thyroid function tests to observe the progress. After three weeks all characteristics of the patient can be inferred from the measured data. The final titration target together with the individual thyroxine half life can be calculated. With the known characteristics and the L-T4 titration target the clinician or treating physician has an instrument to reduce the experimental treatment burden for the patient from one year to a maximum of four weeks.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10441-023-09461-x | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!