Predictors of Initial and Sustained Remission in Patients Treated with Antithyroid Drugs for Graves' Hyperthyroidism: The RISG Study

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Predictors of Initial and Sustained Remission in Patients Treated with Antithyroid Drugs for Graves' Hyperthyroidism : The RISG Study. / Karmisholt, J.; Andersen, S. L.; Bulow-Pedersen, I.; Carlé, A.; Krejbjerg, A.; Nygaard, B.

I: Journal of Thyroid Research, Bind 2019, 5945178, 01.2019.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Karmisholt, J, Andersen, SL, Bulow-Pedersen, I, Carlé, A, Krejbjerg, A & Nygaard, B 2019, 'Predictors of Initial and Sustained Remission in Patients Treated with Antithyroid Drugs for Graves' Hyperthyroidism: The RISG Study', Journal of Thyroid Research, bind 2019, 5945178. https://doi.org/10.1155/2019/5945178

APA

Karmisholt, J., Andersen, S. L., Bulow-Pedersen, I., Carlé, A., Krejbjerg, A., & Nygaard, B. (2019). Predictors of Initial and Sustained Remission in Patients Treated with Antithyroid Drugs for Graves' Hyperthyroidism: The RISG Study. Journal of Thyroid Research, 2019, [5945178]. https://doi.org/10.1155/2019/5945178

Vancouver

Karmisholt J, Andersen SL, Bulow-Pedersen I, Carlé A, Krejbjerg A, Nygaard B. Predictors of Initial and Sustained Remission in Patients Treated with Antithyroid Drugs for Graves' Hyperthyroidism: The RISG Study. Journal of Thyroid Research. 2019 jan.;2019. 5945178. https://doi.org/10.1155/2019/5945178

Author

Karmisholt, J. ; Andersen, S. L. ; Bulow-Pedersen, I. ; Carlé, A. ; Krejbjerg, A. ; Nygaard, B. / Predictors of Initial and Sustained Remission in Patients Treated with Antithyroid Drugs for Graves' Hyperthyroidism : The RISG Study. I: Journal of Thyroid Research. 2019 ; Bind 2019.

Bibtex

@article{0f792c970a7f4cd28a9cdbd2d5f7782d,
title = "Predictors of Initial and Sustained Remission in Patients Treated with Antithyroid Drugs for Graves' Hyperthyroidism: The RISG Study",
abstract = "Purpose. To study predictors of attaining (part 1) and sustaining (part 2) remission in patients with Graves' hyperthyroidism (GH) treated with antithyroid drugs (ATD). Methods. In the prospective first part, the included patients were treated with ATD until a prespecified definition of remission (thyrotropin > 0.4 mU/L and TSH-receptor antibodies (TRAb) ≤ 1. 0 IU/L in a patient receiving a methimazole dose ≤ 5 mg/day, on two occasions two months apart) was met, or for 24 months. In the second part, patients attaining remission in part 1 were randomized to treatment or observation and followed until relapse or for 24 months. Results. 173 patients completed study 1 and 53% attained remission. TRAb and age were the only significant predictors of remission. Patients with baseline TRAb below vs above 10 IU/L attained remission in 63% compared to 39%, and 5 months priorly (p<0.001). In study 2, 96.4% of the patients randomized to treatment (n=33) sustained remission compared to 66% in the observation group (n=33). Treatment arm was the only significant parameter (p<0.001) of sustained remission. Conclusion. Baseline TRAb was prognostic for attaining remission in GH. Consecutive TRAb measurements during treatment were not worthwhile, but a single measurement after 6-8 months in patients with initial TRAb < 10 IU/L could substantially shorten the treatment period in a subgroup of patients. Only 3.6% of the patients in remission experienced relapse during follow-up when treated with a combination of fixed low dose methimazole and L-T4. ClinTrial.gov registration number is NCT00796913.",
author = "J. Karmisholt and Andersen, {S. L.} and I. Bulow-Pedersen and A. Carl{\'e} and A. Krejbjerg and B. Nygaard",
year = "2019",
month = jan,
doi = "10.1155/2019/5945178",
language = "English",
volume = "2019",
journal = "Journal of Thyroid Research",
issn = "2042-0072",
publisher = "Hindawi Publishing Corporation",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Predictors of Initial and Sustained Remission in Patients Treated with Antithyroid Drugs for Graves' Hyperthyroidism

T2 - The RISG Study

AU - Karmisholt, J.

AU - Andersen, S. L.

AU - Bulow-Pedersen, I.

AU - Carlé, A.

AU - Krejbjerg, A.

AU - Nygaard, B.

PY - 2019/1

Y1 - 2019/1

N2 - Purpose. To study predictors of attaining (part 1) and sustaining (part 2) remission in patients with Graves' hyperthyroidism (GH) treated with antithyroid drugs (ATD). Methods. In the prospective first part, the included patients were treated with ATD until a prespecified definition of remission (thyrotropin > 0.4 mU/L and TSH-receptor antibodies (TRAb) ≤ 1. 0 IU/L in a patient receiving a methimazole dose ≤ 5 mg/day, on two occasions two months apart) was met, or for 24 months. In the second part, patients attaining remission in part 1 were randomized to treatment or observation and followed until relapse or for 24 months. Results. 173 patients completed study 1 and 53% attained remission. TRAb and age were the only significant predictors of remission. Patients with baseline TRAb below vs above 10 IU/L attained remission in 63% compared to 39%, and 5 months priorly (p<0.001). In study 2, 96.4% of the patients randomized to treatment (n=33) sustained remission compared to 66% in the observation group (n=33). Treatment arm was the only significant parameter (p<0.001) of sustained remission. Conclusion. Baseline TRAb was prognostic for attaining remission in GH. Consecutive TRAb measurements during treatment were not worthwhile, but a single measurement after 6-8 months in patients with initial TRAb < 10 IU/L could substantially shorten the treatment period in a subgroup of patients. Only 3.6% of the patients in remission experienced relapse during follow-up when treated with a combination of fixed low dose methimazole and L-T4. ClinTrial.gov registration number is NCT00796913.

AB - Purpose. To study predictors of attaining (part 1) and sustaining (part 2) remission in patients with Graves' hyperthyroidism (GH) treated with antithyroid drugs (ATD). Methods. In the prospective first part, the included patients were treated with ATD until a prespecified definition of remission (thyrotropin > 0.4 mU/L and TSH-receptor antibodies (TRAb) ≤ 1. 0 IU/L in a patient receiving a methimazole dose ≤ 5 mg/day, on two occasions two months apart) was met, or for 24 months. In the second part, patients attaining remission in part 1 were randomized to treatment or observation and followed until relapse or for 24 months. Results. 173 patients completed study 1 and 53% attained remission. TRAb and age were the only significant predictors of remission. Patients with baseline TRAb below vs above 10 IU/L attained remission in 63% compared to 39%, and 5 months priorly (p<0.001). In study 2, 96.4% of the patients randomized to treatment (n=33) sustained remission compared to 66% in the observation group (n=33). Treatment arm was the only significant parameter (p<0.001) of sustained remission. Conclusion. Baseline TRAb was prognostic for attaining remission in GH. Consecutive TRAb measurements during treatment were not worthwhile, but a single measurement after 6-8 months in patients with initial TRAb < 10 IU/L could substantially shorten the treatment period in a subgroup of patients. Only 3.6% of the patients in remission experienced relapse during follow-up when treated with a combination of fixed low dose methimazole and L-T4. ClinTrial.gov registration number is NCT00796913.

U2 - 10.1155/2019/5945178

DO - 10.1155/2019/5945178

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 30719273

AN - SCOPUS:85060092561

VL - 2019

JO - Journal of Thyroid Research

JF - Journal of Thyroid Research

SN - 2042-0072

M1 - 5945178

ER -

ID: 240980209