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Routine Thyroid-Stimulating Hormone Testing in the Hospital: Should you order a TSH on a hospitalized patient?

How many times have you ordered a TSH/T4 on a hospitalized patient? If the test returns abnormal, it may have you wondering what to do – is further testing needed, or should you start the patient on levothyroxine? This Journal of Hospital Medicine article addresses the nuances of inpatient thyroid function testing.

Key Points:

  • Nonthyroidal illness syndrome (NTIS), also known as sick euthyroid syndrome, is the biggest confounder of TSH testing in the hospital.
  • NTIS can be caused by a host of other common clinical conditions among inpatients: infection, kidney or liver injury, malnutrition, MI, stroke, malignancy, or recent surgery.
  • The prevalence of NTIS is 62%, while the prevalence of true unrecognized thyroid disease in inpatients is 1-2.5%. The high prevalence of NTIS means the specificity of TSH testing in inpatients is low.

When should we not order thyroid testing?

  • Do NOT routinely order TSH on admission
  • Do NOT order for patients on stable doses of thyroid hormone replacement

When should we actually order thyroid testing?

  • Only if you have high clinical suspicion (I.e., high pretest probability) for thyroid dysfunction, specifically if there are 5+ symptoms
  • May be reasonable in specific clinical scenarios where thyroid dysfunction is a reversible cause, such as: atrial fibrillation, SIADH, unexplained sinus tachycardia (after more common causes have been excluded), and delirium (after more common causes have been excluded)
  • If NTIS is suspected, avoid further inpatient testing and consider outpatient testing once acute illness as resolved

How does decreasing inpatient thyroid testing benefit us?

  • Saves healthcare dollars
  • Prevents patient harm associated with overcasting or over treatment
  • Decreases provider time spent ordering and interpreting abnormal results of unclear significance

 

Wendy Tong, IM PGY-2

Citation: Wootton T, Bates R. Things we do for no reason: routine thyroid-stimulating hormone testing in the hospital. J Hosp Med. 2020; 15(9): 560-562. doi:10.12788/jhm.3347

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