2005-11-01
Polymorphisms in type 2 deiodinase are not associated with well-being, neurocognitive functioning, and preference for combined thyroxine/3,5,3′- triiodothyronine therapy
Publication
Publication
Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism , Volume 90 - Issue 11 p. 6296- 6299
Introduction: Some patients on levothyroxine replacement display significant impairment in psychological well-being, compared with sex- and age-matched controls. Levothyroxine-treated patients can be assumed to derive T3 exclusively from deiodination of T4, which, in the central nervous system, is regulated by type II deiodinase (DII). Objective: We investigated whether two recently identified polymorphisms in the DII gene (DII-ORFa-Gly3Asp and DII-Thr92Ala) are determinants of well-being and neurocognitive functioning and associated with a preference for replacement with a combination of T3 and T4. Methods: Genotypes for both polymorphisms were determined in 141 patients with primary autoimmune hypothyroidism, adequately treated with levothyroxine monotherapy and participating in a randomized clinical trial comparing T4 therapy with T4/T3 combination therapy. Questionnaires on well-being and neurocognitive tests were performed at baseline. Results: Allele frequencies in patients with primary hypothyroidism were similar to those of healthy blood bank donors (32.0 vs. 33.9% for DII-ORFa-Gly3Asp and 40.4 vs. 38.8% for DII-Thr92Ala). DII polymorphisms were not associated with measures of well-being, neurocognitive functioning, or preference for combined T 4/T3 therapy. Conclusion: The DII-ORFa-Gly3Asp and DII-Thr92Ala polymorphisms do not explain differences in well-being, neurocognitive functioning, or appreciation of T4/T3 combination therapy in patients treated for hypothyroidism. Copyright
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| doi.org/10.1210/jc.2005-0451, hdl.handle.net/1765/69837 | |
| Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | |
| Organisation | Department of Cardiology |
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Appelhof, B., Fliers, E., Peeters, R., Wiersinga, W., Visser, T., Wekking, E., … Hoogendijk, W. (2005). Polymorphisms in type 2 deiodinase are not associated with well-being, neurocognitive functioning, and preference for combined thyroxine/3,5,3′- triiodothyronine therapy. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, 90(11), 6296–6299. doi:10.1210/jc.2005-0451 |
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