Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05015725 |
Other study ID # |
RT3QoLSE |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
August 1, 2021 |
Est. completion date |
August 31, 2022 |
Study information
Verified date |
October 2022 |
Source |
Semmelweis University |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The aim of this study is to evaluate the relationship between serum rT3 (serum reverse
triiodothyronine) concentrations, T3/T4 (triiodothyronine/thyroxine) ratio, and persistent
symptoms /quality of life in treated hypothyroid patients.
Investigators are going to measure TSH (thyroid stimulating hormone), free-T3, free-T4,
reverse-T3 levels, biochemical markers of hypothyroidism and quality of life (assessed by
validated questionnaires).
Description:
Rationale: L-thyroxin (T4) substitution is the mainstay of treatment for hypothyroidism
irrespective of disease origin. In a subset of patients with hypothyroidism however an
inadequate peripheral T4->T3 conversion is hypostasized by some authors. This is speculated
to lead to tissue level hypothyroidism and persistent symptoms even with adequate T4
replacement. As a potential pathogenetic mechanism, the inborn or acquired defect of
peripheral deiodinases, decreased T3 and increased rT3 production is suggested.
Few results support this hypothesis. A decreased T3/T4 ratio has been reported in some
post-surgical hypothyroid patients, while a few studies patient show increased patient
satisfaction with combined T4+T3 substitution. However these differences have not been shown
to be significant in large meta-analyses.
Due to the lack of convincing evidence current guidelines advocate against both routine rT3
measurement and T3 substitution. However in recent years, rT3 measurement and T3
supplementation has been steadily gaining popularity amongst some medical and functional
medicine practitioners. Recent publications estimate order volume for rT3 tests in the US to
be over 1 million per year. Thus, despite several decades of experience and multiple trials,
the role of liothyronine (T3) substitution remains somewhat controversial.
The relationship between rT3 levels, T3/T4 ratio, quality of life and persistent symptoms of
hypothyroidism in patients treated with adequate thyroxine doses has not been previously
assessed.
A significant association of this nature would suggest the possibility of decreased
peripheral T4->T3 conversion in some patients leading to worse treatment outcomes. A lack of
relationship would further discredit the above detailed theories and could potentially help
reduce the inadequate use of T3 substitution in patients.
Study population: Patients treated for hypothyroidism with no significant comorbidities are
to be enrolled. Sample size calculations show adequate statistical power with over 150
participants. Based on the number of hypothyroid patients at our outpatient clinic, a sample
size of 300-350 patients can reasonably be expected.
Schedule of activities: All study related procedures are performed during a single visit.
These include recording of basic anthropometric data, a single draw of blood, and
administration of psychological questionnaires. Laboratory tests include comprehensive
thyroid function testing (TSH, T3, FT3, FT4, aTPO [anti-thyroperoxidase antibody]) with the
addition of rT3 measurement. Less specific markers, associated with hypothyroidism are also
assessed. These include serum cholesterol, CK (creatin-kinase), GOT/ASAT
(aspartate-aminotransferase), GPT/ALAT (alanine-aminotransferase), creatinine and sodium
levels. Psychological tests administered at the visit include ThyDQol, ThySRQ and the
Somatosensory Amplification Scale (SASS) adding up to ~50 items including demographic
variables.
Statistical analysis: Statistical methods for this study possibly include correlation
analysis, linear and logistic regression.
Objectives and endpoints: Current understanding of hypothyroidism and thyroid hormone
replacement imply that treatment with thyroxine doses that are sufficient to the normalize
TSH lead to adequate tissue T3 levels and euthyroid state in the whole body. An association
however between quality of life and rT3, levels or T3/T4 ratio could point out patients that
could potentially benefit from additional T3 replacement.