Patients' Persistent Symptoms, Clinician Demographics, and Geo-Economic Factors Are Associated with Choice of Therapy for Hypothyroidism by European Thyroid Specialists: The "THESIS" Collaboration

Roberto Attanasio*, Miloš Žarković, Enrico Papini, Endre Vezekenyi Nagy, Roberto Negro, Petros Perros, Ersin Akarsu, Maria Alevizaki, Göksun Ayvaz, Tomasz Bednarczuk, Biljana Nedeljković Beleslin, Eszter Berta, Miklos Bodor, Anna Maria Borissova, Mihail Boyanov, Camille Buffet, Maria-Cristina Burlacu, Jasmina Ćirić, Juan J Díez, Harald DobnigValentin Fadeyev, Benjamin C T Field, Eric Fliers, Dagmar Führer-Sakel, Juan Carlos Galofré, Tommi Hakala, Jan Jiskra, Peter A Kopp, Michael Krebs, Michal Kršek, Martin Kužma, Mikael Lantz, Ivica Lazúrová, Laurence Leenhardt, Vitaliy Luchytskiy, Francisca Marques Puga, Anne McGowan, Saara Metso, Carla Moran, Tatyana Morgunova, Dan Alexandru Niculescu, Božidar Perić, Tereza Planck, Catalina Poiana, Eyal Robenshtok, Patrick Olivier Rosselet, Marek Ruchala, Kamilla Ryom Riis, Alla Shepelkevich, Mykola D Tronko, David Unuane, Irfan Vardarli, W Edward Visser, Andromachi Vryonidou, Younes Ramazan Younes, Laszlo Hegedüs

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Background: Hypothyroidism is common, however, aspects of its treatment remain controversial. Our survey aimed at documenting treatment choices of European thyroid specialists and exploring how patients' persistent symptoms, clinician demographics, and geo-economic factors relate to treatment choices. Methods: Seventeen thousand two hundred forty-seven thyroid specialists from 28 countries were invited to participate in an online questionnaire survey. The survey included respondent demographic data and treatment choices for hypothyroid patients with persistent symptoms. Geo-economic data for each country were included in the analyses. Results: The response rate was 32.9% (6058 respondents out of 17,247 invitees). Levothyroxine (LT4) was the initial treatment preferred by the majority (98.3%). Persistent symptoms despite normal serum thyrotropin (TSH) while receiving LT4 treatment were reported to affect up to 10.0% of patients by 75.4% of respondents, while 28.4% reported an increasing such trend in the past 5 years. The principal explanations offered for patients' persistent symptoms were psychosocial factors (77.1%), comorbidities (69.2%), and unrealistic patient expectations (61.0%). Combination treatment with LT4+liothyronine (LT3) was chosen by 40.0% of respondents for patients who complained of persistent symptoms despite a normal TSH. This option was selected more frequently by female thyroid specialists, with high-volume practice, working in countries with high gross national income per capita. Conclusions: The perception of patients' dissatisfaction reported by physicians seems lower than that described by hypothyroid patients in previous surveys. LT4+LT3 treatment is used frequently by thyroid specialists in Europe for persistent hypothyroid-like symptoms even if they generally attribute such symptoms to nonendocrine causes and despite the evidence of nonsuperiority of the combined over the LT4 therapy. Pressure by dissatisfied patients on their physicians for LT3-containing treatments is a likely explanation. The association of the therapeutic choices with the clinician demographic characteristics and geo-economic factors in Europe is a novel information and requires further investigation.

Original languageEnglish
JournalThyroid : official journal of the American Thyroid Association
Volume34
Issue number4
Pages (from-to)429-441
ISSN1050-7256
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2024

Keywords

  • Humans
  • Female
  • Thyrotropin
  • Hypothyroidism/drug therapy
  • Thyroxine
  • Triiodothyronine
  • Demography

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