Yu Huan, Farahani Pendar
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Clin Invest Med. 2015 Apr 8;38(2):E31-44. doi: 10.25011/cim.v38i1.22574.
Post-treatment hypothyroidism is common in Graves' disease, and clinical guidelines recommend monitoring for it; however, thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) can remain suppressed in these patients following treatment. The objectives of this study were to explore the proposed pathophysiology behind the phenomenon of post-therapy TSH suppression and to systematically review existing clinical data on post-therapy TSH suppression in patients with Graves' disease.
A systematic literature search was performed using EMBASE and PubMed databases, with several combinations of MeSH terms. Bibliography mining was also done on relevant articles to be as inclusive as possible.
A total of 18 articles described possible mechanisms for post-therapy TSH suppression. Several of the studies demonstrate evidence of thyrotroph atrophy and hypothesize that this contributes to the ongoing suppression. TSH receptors have been identified in folliculo-stellate cells of the pituitary as well as astroglial cells of the hypothalamus, mediating paracrine feedback. A few studies have demonstrated inverse correlation between autoantibody titres and TSH levels, suggestive of their role in mediating ongoing TSH suppression in patients with Graves' disease. In addition, five studies were identified that provided clinical data on the duration of TSH suppression. Combined data show that 45.5% of patients recover TSH by 3 months after treatment, increasing to 69.3% by 6 months, and plateauing to 73.8% by 12 months (p>0.0001). Sub-analysis also shows that for patients who are TBII negative, 80.7% recover their TSH by 6 months compared with only 58.7% in those who are TBII positive (p= 0.003).
Clinical data suggests that TSH recovery is most likely to occur within the first 6 months after treatment, with recovery plateauing at approximately 70% of patients, suggesting that reliance on this assay for monitoring can be very misleading. Furthermore, TBII positivity is associated with lower likelihood of TSH recovery. Pathophysiology behind suppressed TSH involves not only anatomical but also autoimmune mechanisms.
治疗后甲状腺功能减退在格雷夫斯病中很常见,临床指南建议对此进行监测;然而,这些患者在治疗后促甲状腺激素(TSH)可能仍处于抑制状态。本研究的目的是探讨治疗后TSH抑制现象背后的病理生理学机制,并系统回顾格雷夫斯病患者治疗后TSH抑制的现有临床数据。
使用EMBASE和PubMed数据库,通过多种医学主题词(MeSH)组合进行了系统的文献检索。还对相关文章进行了文献挖掘,以尽可能全面。
共有18篇文章描述了治疗后TSH抑制的可能机制。一些研究证明了促甲状腺细胞萎缩的证据,并推测这导致了持续的抑制。TSH受体已在垂体的滤泡星状细胞以及下丘脑的星形胶质细胞中被鉴定出来,介导旁分泌反馈。一些研究表明自身抗体滴度与TSH水平呈负相关,提示它们在介导格雷夫斯病患者持续的TSH抑制中起作用。此外,确定了五项提供TSH抑制持续时间临床数据的研究。综合数据显示,45.5%的患者在治疗后3个月时TSH恢复正常,6个月时增至69.3%,12个月时稳定在73.8%(p>0.0001)。亚组分析还显示,对于促甲状腺素结合抑制免疫球蛋白(TBII)阴性的患者,80.7%在6个月时TSH恢复正常,而TBII阳性患者中这一比例仅为58.7%(p=0.003)。
临床数据表明,TSH恢复最有可能发生在治疗后的前6个月内,约70%的患者恢复正常,这表明依赖该检测进行监测可能会产生很大误导。此外,TBII阳性与TSH恢复的可能性较低有关。TSH受抑制背后的病理生理学不仅涉及解剖学机制,还涉及自身免疫机制。