B4336 - Developmental origins of thyroid function regulation and its neurocognitive and reproductive consequences - 20/06/2023
Thyroid dysfunction due to hypo- or hyperthyroidism affects 200 million people worldwide and is a major health burden, particularly in women who are 4-10 times more likely to suffer from hypothyroidism as a result of autoimmune disease. Thyroid hormones are vital for healthy metabolism, tissue differentiation, neurodevelopment, growth, immune function, reproduction, and ageing, yet the relative contribution of environmental exposures (e.g. nutrition, psycho-socio-economic adversity, etc.) in shaping thyroid function regulation remains unknown. The thyroid axis is especially important for the health of women and their children, but currently there is a lack of intergenerational data that can help understand the complex interplay between iodine, environmental factors in early life and thyroid function regulation in the offspring. We aim to fill that gap by investigating (1) critical environmental exposures that impact thyroid function regulation, and their subsequent influence on (2) reproductive health and (3) neurocognitive outcomes. Within these analyses we will look at both natural variation in thyroid function parameters as well as pathological variation due to thyroid dysfunction. At the centre of this exploration is the complex interplay between mother and offspring around limited iodine resources and thyroid function regulation during pregnancy and its long-term consequences. Identifying critical periods of thyroid function plasticity may have significant implications for the optimal timing of comprehensive public health interventions that can decrease the burden of thyroid dysfunction and its health costs over the life course. This proposal has been adjusted from proposal B3905 submitted in 2021.