Scientific article
Meta-analysis
OA Policy
English

Thyroid antibodies and levothyroxine effects in subclinical hypothyroidism: A pooled analysis of two randomized controlled trials

Published inJournal of internal medicine, vol. 292, no. 6, p. 892-903
Publication date2022-07-27
First online date2022-07-27
Abstract

Background: Antithyroid antibodies increase the likelihood of developing overt hypothyroidism, but their clinical utility remains unclear. No large randomized controlled trial (RCT) has assessed whether older adults with subclinical hypothyroidism (SHypo) caused by autoimmune thyroid disease derive more benefits from levothyroxine treatment (LT4).

Objective: To determine whether older adults with SHypo and positive antibodies derive more clinical benefits from LT4 than those with negative antibodies.

Methods: We pooled individual participant data from two RCTs, Thyroid Hormone Replacement for Untreated Older Adults with Subclinical Hypothyroidism and IEMO 80+. Participants with persistent SHypo were randomly assigned to receive LT4 or placebo. We compared the effects of LT4 versus placebo in participants with and without anti-thyroid peroxidase (TPO) at baseline. The two primary outcomes were 1-year change in Hypothyroid Symptoms and Tiredness scores on the Thyroid-Related Quality-of-Life Patient-Reported Outcome Questionnaire.

Results: Among 660 participants (54% women) ≥65 years, 188 (28.5%) had positive anti-TPO. LT4 versus placebo on Hypothyroid Symptoms lead to an adjusted between-group difference of -2.07 (95% confidence interval: -6.04 to 1.90) for positive antibodies versus 0.89 (-1.76 to 3.54) for negative antibodies (p for interaction = 0.31). Similarly, there was no treatment effect modification by baseline antibody status for Tiredness scores-adjusted between-group difference 1.75 (-3.60 to 7.09) for positive antibodies versus 1.14 (-1.90 to 4.19) for negative antibodies (p for interaction = 0.98). Positive anti-TPO were not associated with better quality of life, improvement in handgrip strength, or fewer cardiovascular outcomes with levothyroxine treatment.

Conclusions: Among older adults with SHypo, positive antithyroid antibodies are not associated with more benefits on clinical outcomes with LT4.

Keywords
  • Autoimmune thyroid disease
  • Levothyroxine treatment
  • Subclinical hypothyroidism
Citation (ISO format)
LYKO, Christina et al. Thyroid antibodies and levothyroxine effects in subclinical hypothyroidism: A pooled analysis of two randomized controlled trials. In: Journal of internal medicine, 2022, vol. 292, n° 6, p. 892–903. doi: 10.1111/joim.13544
Main files (1)
Article (Published version)
Identifiers
Journal ISSN0954-6820
157views
54downloads

Technical informations

Creation21/04/2023 08:22:20
First validation02/10/2023 15:38:39
Update time13/10/2025 14:17:13
Status update31/01/2025 16:17:41
Last indexation06/11/2025 19:53:01
All rights reserved by Archive ouverte UNIGE and the University of GenevaunigeBlack