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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How often dogs treated for hypothyroidism really have it

By Travail, Victoria et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2024·Southern Counties Veterinary Specialists, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Assessment of the likelihood of hypothyroidism in dogs diagnosed with and treated for hypothyroidism at primary care practices: 102 cases (2016-2021).

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 102 dogs that were diagnosed with hypothyroidism and treated with levothyroxine (a thyroid hormone supplement) were evaluated to see if they truly needed the medication. The veterinarians found that many of these dogs might not actually have hypothyroidism, with some assessments indicating that up to 58.8% of the cases did not require treatment. This suggests that some dogs may be misdiagnosed and that thyroid testing should be reserved for those dogs showing strong signs of the disease.

People also search for: dog hypothyroidism symptoms · levothyroxine for dogs · how to test dog thyroid levels

Abstract

BACKGROUND: There is a possibility that an incorrect diagnosis of hypothyroidism could be made in euthyroid dogs, and the prevalence of hypothyroidism in the dog population remains unknown. OBJECTIVES: To retrospectively assess the percentage of dogs diagnosed with, and treated for, hypothyroidism at first opinion practice which are likely to be hypothyroid and require levothyroxine supplementation. ANIMALS: One hundred two client-owned dogs were included in this study. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The computerized databases of 7 first opinion practices were searched to identify dogs treated with levothyroxine supplementation. Three European College of Veterinary Internal Medicine-Companian Animals (ECVIM-CA) diplomates independently assigned 1 of 4 clinical assessments to each case as follows: confirmed or likely hypothyroid, hypothyroidism suspected but not confirmed, hypothyroidism considered unlikely, and no reason to suspect hypothyroidism. They commented as to whether or not they thought levothyroxine supplementation was appropriate. RESULTS: The clinical assessments of "confirmed or likely hypothyroid"; "Hypothyroidism suspected but not confirmed"; "Hypothyroidism considered unlikely"; and "No reason to suspect hypothyroidism" was assigned respectively by Clinician 1 to 38.2%, 5.9%, 3.9%, and 52% of cases, by Clinician 2 to 48%, 22.6%, 22.6%, 6.9% of cases, and by Clinician 3 to 55.9%, 11.8%, 13.7% and 18.6%. Clinician 1, Clinician 2, and Clinician 3 considered levothyroxine supplementation not indicated in 58.8%, 52.9%, and 45.1% of cases, respectively. CONCLUSION: These results support the concern that hypothyroidism might be overly and incorrectly diagnosed in first opinion practice, and that thyroid function testing should be performed only in those dogs with a high pretest probability of the disease.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38314891/