| Literature DB >> 28674523 |
Silvia Martina Ferrari1, Giusy Elia1, Camilla Virili2, Marco Centanni2, Alessandro Antonelli1, Poupak Fallahi1.
Abstract
Most of the studies present in the literature show a high prevalence, and incidence, of new cases of hypothyroidism and autoimmune thyroiditis (AT) in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients, overall in female gender. A limited number of cases of Graves' disease have been also reported in SLE patients, in agreement with the higher prevalence of thyroid autoimmunity. It has been also demonstrated that a Th1 predominance is associated with AT in SLE patients. Furthermore, a higher prevalence of papillary thyroid cancer has been recently reported in SLE, in particular in the presence of thyroid autoimmunity. However, studies in larger number of SLE patients are needed to confirm findings about thyroid cancer. On the whole, data from literature strongly suggest that female SLE patients, with a high risk (a normal but at the higher limit thyroid-stimulating hormone value, positive antithyroid peroxidase antibodies, a hypoechoic pattern, and small thyroid), should undergo periodic thyroid function follow-up, and appropriate treatments when needed. A careful thyroid monitoring would be opportune during the follow-up of these patients.Entities:
Keywords: AbTPO; AbTg; CXCL10; Graves’ disease; autoimmune thyroiditis; hypothyroidism; systemic lupus erythematosus; thyroid cancer
Year: 2017 PMID: 28674523 PMCID: PMC5474463 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2017.00138
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Prevalence of thyroid autoimmunity in SLE patients versus controls, in the studies that have an internal control matched by gender and age.
| Reference | SLE patients ( | AITD% in SLE patients | Controls ( | AITD% in controls | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antonelli et al. ( | 213 | Thyroid autoimmunity 34.7% | 426 | Thyroid autoimmunity 15.1% | <0.001 |
| Antonelli et al. ( | 153 | AbTg or AbTPO positivity 33%; AbTg and AbTPO positivity 12% | 459 iodine-deficient controls and 459 iodine-sufficient controls | AbTg or AbTPO positivity 11% in iodine-deficient controls; AbTg or AbTPO positivity 13% in iodine-sufficient controls; AbTg and AbTPO positivity 2% in iodine-deficient controls; AbTg and AbTPO positivity 3% in iodine-sufficient controls | <0.0001 for AbTg or AbTPO positivity; 0.001 for AbTg and AbTPO positivity |
| Weetman and Walport ( | 41 | ThyAb 51% | 41 | ThyAb 27% | <0.05 |
| Vianna et al. ( | 100 | ThyAb 21%; AbTg 11% | 100 | ThyAb 16%; AbTg 2% | 0.009 for AbTg |
| Mihailova et al. ( | 12 children with SLE | AbTg 58% | 27 children having juvenile chronic arthritis | AbTg 63% autoimmune thyroiditis 44.4% | Not reported |
| Shahin et al. ( | 45; AbTg and AbM were assessed in 27 patients | AbTg 18.5% | 20 | 0 | ns |
| Mader et al. ( | 77 | AbTg 7.8%; AbTPO 5.2% | 52 | AbTg 7.7%; AbTPO 7.7% | ns |
| Appenzeller et al. ( | 524 | Symptomatic AITD was observed in 6.1% | 50 | Symptomatic AITD was observed in 2% | >0.05 |
| Lazúrová et al. ( | 80 patients with SLE or RA (12 SLE and 68 RA) | Prevalence of AITD 24% | 34 | Prevalence of AITD 8% | <0.05 |
| Kumar et al. ( | 100 | Prevalence of ThyAb 30% | 100 | Prevalence of ThyAb 10% | <0.05 |
| Lin et al. ( | 1,633 | Cumulative incidence of thyroid disease 8.1% | 6,532 | Cumulative incidence of thyroid disease 16.9% | <0.001 |
AbM, antimicrosomal antibodies; AITD, autoimmune thyroid disorders; AbTg, anti-thyroglobulin antibodies; AbTPO, anti-thyroperoxidase antibodies; RA, rheumatoid arthritis; SLE, systemic lupus erythematosus; ThyAb, thyroid autoantibodies.