Low T3 syndrome upon admission and response to nutritional support in malnourished medical inpatients.

Müller, Natasha Anouschka; Kaegi-Braun, Nina; Durmisi, Mirsada; Gressies, Carla; Tribolet, Pascal; Stanga, Zeno; Mueller, Beat; Schuetz, Philipp (2023). Low T3 syndrome upon admission and response to nutritional support in malnourished medical inpatients. The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism, 108(6), e240-e248. The Endocrine Society 10.1210/clinem/dgac743

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INTRODUCTION

During illness, deiodination of thyroxine (T4) to triiodothyronine (T3) is down regulated. This is called "low T3 syndrome", an adaptive metabolic mechanism to reduce energy expenditure and prevent catabolism. We investigated the prognostic role of low T3 syndrome in patients at nutritional risk regarding mortality, clinical outcomes and response to nutritional support.

METHODS

This is a secondary analysis of the Effect of Early Nutritional Support on Frailty, Functional Outcomes, and Recovery of Malnourished Medical Inpatients Trial (EFFORT), a randomized-controlled Swiss multicenter trial comparing effects of individualized nutritional support with usual care in adult medical inpatients at nutritional risk. The primary endpoint was all-cause mortality over 30-,180-days and 5-years.

RESULTS

We had complete data including fT3 concentration of 801/2028 (39.5%) patients from the initial trial. Of these 492 (61.4%) had low T3 syndrome (fT3 < 3.2 pmol/l). Low T3 syndrome was associated with higher mortality over 30 days (adjusted hazard ratio 1.97 [95%CI 1.17 to 3.31], p 0.011) and other adverse clinical outcomes. Nutritional support only lowered mortality in the group of patients with but not in those without low T3 syndrome (adjusted odds ratio of nutritional support of 0.82 [95%CI 0.47 to 1.41] vs. 1.47 [95%CI 0.55 to 3.94]). This finding, however, was not significant in interaction analysis (p for interaction = 0.401).

CONCLUSIONS

Our secondary analysis of a randomized trial suggests that medical inpatients at nutritional risk with low T3 syndrome have a substantial increase in mortality and may show a more pronounced beneficial response to nutritional support interventions.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

04 Faculty of Medicine > Department of Gynaecology, Paediatrics and Endocrinology (DFKE) > Clinic of Endocrinology, Diabetology and Clinical Nutrition

UniBE Contributor:

Stanga, Zeno

Subjects:

600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health

ISSN:

1945-7197

Publisher:

The Endocrine Society

Language:

English

Submitter:

Pubmed Import

Date Deposited:

10 Jan 2023 09:53

Last Modified:

23 Dec 2023 00:25

Publisher DOI:

10.1210/clinem/dgac743

PubMed ID:

36546619

Uncontrolled Keywords:

Euthyroid sick syndrome Low T3 syndrome Nutritional risk Nutritional support Triiodothyronine fT3

BORIS DOI:

10.48350/176417

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/176417

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