Skip to main navigation Skip to search Skip to main content

TIPIT: A Randomized Controlled Trial of Thyroxine in Preterm infants Under 28 Weeks' Gestation

  • Sze M. Ng*
  • , Mark A. Turner
  • , Carrol Gamble
  • , Mohammed Didi
  • , Suresh Victor
  • , Christina Malamateniou
  • , Laura M. Parkes
  • , Anna Tietze
  • , Lloyd Gregory
  • , Vanessa Sluming
  • , Laurence Abernethy
  • , Alan M. Weindling
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • School of Reproductive and Developmental Medicine
  • University of Liverpool
  • Alder Hey Children's NHS Foundation Trust
  • University of Manchester
  • Wellcome Trust

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (journal)peer-review

Abstract

Background: Infants born at extreme prematurity are at high risk of developmental disability. A major risk factor for disability is having a low level of thyroid hormone described as hypothyroxinaemia, which is recognised to be a frequent phenomenon in these infants. Derangements of critical thyroid function during the sensitive window in prematurity when early development occurs, may have a range of long term effects for brain development. Further research in preterm infants using neuroimaging techniques will increase our understanding of the specificity of the effects of hypothyroxinaemia on the developing foetal brain. This is an explanatory double blinded randomised controlled trial which is aimed to assess the effect of thyroid hormone supplementation on brain size, key brain structures, extent of myelination, white matter integrity and vessel morphology, somatic growth and the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis.

Methods: The study is a multi-centred double blinded randomised controlled trial of thyroid hormone supplementation in babies born below 28 weeks' gestation. All infants will receive either levothyroxine or placebo until 32 weeks corrected gestational age. The primary outcomes will be width of the sub-arachnoid space measured using cranial ultrasound and head circumference at 36 weeks corrected gestational age. The secondary outcomes will be thyroid hormone concentrations, the hypothalamic pituitary axis status and auxological data between birth and expected date of delivery; thyroid gland volume, brain size, volumes of key brain structures, extent of myelination and brain vessel morphology at expected date of delivery and markers of morbidity which include duration of mechanical ventilation and/or oxygen requirement and chronic lung disease.
Original languageEnglish
Article number26
JournalNeonatal Intensive Care
Volume8
Issue number26
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 30 Jun 2008

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'TIPIT: A Randomized Controlled Trial of Thyroxine in Preterm infants Under 28 Weeks' Gestation'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this