AI Article Synopsis

  • Thyroid hormones are essential for health and their levels change with age, which current reference intervals may not account for, leading to potential misdiagnoses.
  • Evidence shows that TSH levels are highest at the beginning and end of life, while FT3 levels decline with age, affecting health outcomes differently in various age groups.
  • There is a need for further research to establish appropriate thyroid hormone reference ranges that consider age-related variations to improve treatment and risk management strategies across all age demographics.

Article Abstract

Background: Thyroid hormones are key determinants of health and well-being. Normal thyroid function is defined according to the standard 95% confidence interval of the disease-free population. Such standard laboratory reference intervals are widely applied in research and clinical practice, irrespective of age. However, thyroid hormones vary with age and current reference intervals may not be appropriate across all age groups. In this review, we summarize the recent literature on age-related variation in thyroid function and discuss important implications of such variation for research and clinical practice.

Main Text: There is now substantial evidence that normal thyroid status changes with age throughout the course of life. Thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) concentrations are higher at the extremes of life and show a U-shaped longitudinal trend in iodine sufficient Caucasian populations. Free triiodothyronine (FT3) levels fall with age and appear to play a role in pubertal development, during which it shows a strong relationship with fat mass. Furthermore, the aging process exerts differential effects on the health consequences of thyroid hormone variations. Older individuals with declining thyroid function appear to have survival advantages compared to individuals with normal or high-normal thyroid function. In contrast younger or middle-aged individuals with low-normal thyroid function suffer an increased risk of adverse cardiovascular and metabolic outcomes while those with high-normal function have adverse bone outcomes including osteoporosis and fractures.

Conclusion: Thyroid hormone reference intervals have differential effects across age groups. Current reference ranges could potentially lead to inappropriate treatment in older individuals but on the other hand could result in missed opportunities for risk factor modification in the younger and middle-aged groups. Further studies are now needed to determine the validity of age-appropriate reference intervals and to understand the impact of thyroid hormone variations in younger individuals.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10069079PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13044-023-00149-5DOI Listing

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