Abstract
To determine and compare the usefulness of cord blood screening for free thyroxine (FT4) and thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH). There is a vast amount of literature on capillary heel prick screening tests, but relatively little on cord blood testing particularly FT4. For a decade all infants born at Tawam Hospital had cord blood FT4 and at Oasis Hospital cord TSH measured through the hospital-based screening programme. On January 1st 1998, the national screening programme (NSP) for congenital hypothyroidism (CH) in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) started using capillary TSH measurement (Delfia method). Since then newborns in both hospitals have been screened both ways, i.e. cord blood and capillary blood screening. We reviewed retrospectively all infants born from January 1998 until the end of June 2004 with CH who had double screening: cord FT4 or TSH and 4th-5th day TSH screening. Thirteen infants (one in 1,778) had CH in Tawam Hospital. In six of these the cord blood FT4 was low (<9.1 pm/l) (0.73 ng/dl) and in seven the cord blood FT4 was normal, i.e., over half were missed. Eight infants (one in 1,198) had CH in the Oasis Hospital. Cord blood TSH was high in six of them (>13 IU/l) and two were normal. Cord FT4 detected the most severe cases, but missed most others. Cord TSH detected six out of eight cases, but there was a recall rate of one in 23. Cord FT4 identifies only infants with severe CH. Cord TSH is more sensitive than cord FT4 screening. Capillary TSH dried blood spot testing on the 3rd-5th day is the most sensitive method.
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