Résumé : The effects of storage on the assessment of thyroxine (T4) and thyrotropin (TSH) were evaluated in blood spots collected on filter paper according to the methods commonly used in screening for congenital hypothyroidism. Comparisons were made with serum values obtained simultaneously in the same subjects. In samples stored at room temperature a clear-cut decrease in T4 was observed after 24 hours while TSH was stable for at least 15 days. Spot samples collected in an area of severe endemic goiter in Africa and analyzed in Brussels displayed a systematic decrease in T4 (up to 133 nmol/l) while TSH was fairly stable. Spot samples collected in Belgium were stored at -18 degrees C and were reassayed after 1 year; they did not show any significant change in TSH but a systematic decrease in T4. We conclude that spot TSH is the tool of choice in screening for congenital hypothyroidism particularly in developing countries and that spot T4 should not be used for field studies or under any circumstances in which assays cannot be performed very soon after blood collection.