RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Prevention of intellectual disability through screening for congenital hypothyroidism: how much and at what level? JF Archives of Disease in Childhood JO Arch Dis Child FD BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health SP 374 OP 379 DO 10.1136/adc.2010.190280 VO 96 IS 4 A1 Scott D Grosse A1 Guy Van Vliet YR 2011 UL http://adc.bmj.com/content/96/4/374.abstract AB Objective Congenital hypothyroidism (CHT) is a common cause of preventable mental retardation, and the quantification of intellectual disability due to CHT is needed to assess the public health benefit of newborn screening. Design Review of published studies conducted among children born prior to the introduction of newborn screening for CHT and reporting cognitive test scores. Setting Population-based studies. Patients Children with clinically diagnosed CHT. Interventions Thyroid hormone substitution. Main outcome measures Intelligence quotient (IQ) (mean and distribution). Results The prevalence of recognised CHT rose from one in 6500 prior to screening to approximately one in 3000 with screening. In four population-based studies in high-income countries, among children with clinically diagnosed CHT 8–28% were classified as having intellectual disability (defined as an IQ <70) and the mean IQ was 85 (a leftward shift of 1 SD). Among children with subclinical CHT, the risk of overt intellectual disability was lower (zero in one study), but decreased intellectual potential and increased behavioural abnormalities were documented. Conclusions Although the prevalence of overt disability among children with CHT in the absence of screening may be less than previously estimated, the preventable burden of intellectual disability due to CHT is substantial and justifies newborn screening. However, changes in existing newborn screening protocols to capture more cases are unlikely to prevent overt cases of disability and should therefore be justified instead by the documentation of other benefits of early detection.