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ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Reference range of thyroid hormones in normal Indian school-age children
R. K. Marwaha*, Nikhil Tandon, Ankush Desai, Ratnesh Kanwar*, Khushi Grewal*, Rashmi Aggarwal*, Aparna Sastry*, Satveer Singh*, S. K. Ganguly* and Kalaivani Mani
  *Department of Endocrinology and Thyroid Research Centre, Institute of Nuclear Medicine and Allied Sciences, Delhi, and Departments of   Endocrinology and Metabolism and   Biostatistics, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, India
Correspondence: Dr Brigadier R. K. Marwaha, Department of Endocrinology and Thyroid Research Centre, Institute of Nuclear Medicine and Allied Sciences, Timarpur, Delhi 110054, India. Tel.: +91 11 23939684; Fax: +91 11 23919509; E-mail: marwaha_raman@hotmail.com

R. K. Marwaha and Nikhil Tandon should be considered as joint first authors.

Copyright Journal compilation © 2007 Blackwell Publishing Ltd

ABSTRACT

AbstractIntroductionMaterials and methodsResultsDiscussionAcknowledgementsReferences

Objective  There is an ongoing debate on narrowing the TSH reference range in adults. In view of the scarce data on normal values of thyroid function tests in children from India, we planned to establish a reference range for thyroid hormones in school-age children.

Design and subjects  All children (N = 9527; 6–19 years) from six schools representing various zones of Delhi were evaluated for clinical evidence of goitre, thyroid ultrasound, serum free T3 (FT3), free T4 (FT4) and TSH and anti-thyroid peroxidase (anti-TPO) antibodies. From this sample, a reference population (N = 5122) was obtained by excluding those with a personal or family history of thyroid disease, use of thyroid medications, goitre, hypoechogenicity/nodularity on ultrasound or serum anti-TPO antibodies.

Measurements  Thyroid hormone (FT3, FT4 and TSH) reference ranges were established for each year of life for the total and reference populations.

Results  In the reference population, mean serum FT3 was in the range 4·19–4·84 pm/l for boys and 4·03–4·47 pm/l for girls, mean serum FT4 14·69–17·36 pm/l for boys and 14·32–15·88 pm/l for girls, and mean serum TSH 2·57–3·6 mIU/l for boys and 1·83–3·58 mIU/l for girls. For TSH, the 97th percentile was in the range 6·01–8·4 mIU/l for boys and 5·28–8·04 mIU/l for girls, suggesting that at least in children there may not be a need to reduce the upper limit of normal for serum TSH.

Conclusions  This study provides mean reference intervals for FT3, FT4 and TSH for each year of life for both the sexes separately using strict exclusion criteria.


(Received 17 April 2007; returned for revision 14 May 2007; finally revised 29 June 2007; accepted 21 July 2007)

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1365-2265.2007.03048.x About DOI

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