| Literature DB >> 29033895 |
Mario Rotondi1, Martina Molteni1, Paola Leporati1, Valentina Capelli2, Michele Marinò3, Luca Chiovato1.
Abstract
Alemtuzumab, a humanized anti-CD52 monoclonal antibody, is approved for the treatment of active relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (MS). Alemtuzumab induces a rapid and prolonged depletion of lymphocytes from the circulation, which results in a profound immuno-suppression status followed by an immune reconstitution phase. Secondary to reconstitution autoimmune diseases represent the most common side effect of Alemtuzumab treatment. Among them, Graves' disease (GD) is the most frequent one with an estimated prevalence ranging from 16.7 to 41.0% of MS patients receiving Alemtuzumab. Thyrotropin (TSH) receptor (R)-reactive B cells are typically observed in GD and eventually present this autoantigen to T-cells, which, in turn, secrete several pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines. Given that reconstitution autoimmunity is more frequently characterized by autoantibody-mediated diseases rather than by destructive Th1-mediated disorders, it is not surprising that GD is the most commonly reported side effect of Alemtuzumab treatment in patients with MS. On the other hand, immune reconstitution GD was not observed in a large series of patients with rheumatoid arthritis treated with Alemtuzumab. This negative finding supports the view that patients with MS are intrinsically more at risk for developing Alemtuzumab-related thyroid dysfunctions and in particular of GD. From a clinical point of view, Alemtuzumab-induced GD is characterized by a surprisingly high rate of remission, both spontaneous and after antithyroid drugs, as well as by a spontaneous shift to hypothyroidism, which is supposed to result from a change from stimulating to blocking TSH-receptor antibodies. These immune and clinical peculiarities support the concept that antithyroid drugs should be the first-line treatment in Alemtuzumab-induced Graves' hyperthyroidism.Entities:
Keywords: Alemtuzumab; Graves’ disease; autoimmune thyroid disease; multiple sclerosis; reconstitution syndrome
Year: 2017 PMID: 29033895 PMCID: PMC5626941 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2017.00254
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Thyroid dysfunction during Alemtuzumab treatment in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS).
| Patients and dysfunctions | (%) |
|---|---|
Graves’ hyperthyroidism Hypothyroidism Destructive thyroiditis | 22.4 7.4 4.2 |
Graves’ hyperthyroidism Hypothyroidism Destructive thryoiditis Unknown | 65.8 20.5 10.3 1.4 |
Single Multiple | 70.0 30.0 |
Graves’ hyperthyroidism Overt Subclinical Hypothyroidism Destructive thryoiditis Unknown Graves’ orbitophaty | 58.8 81.7 18.3 29.4 9.8 2.0 6.0 |
Results of the CAMMS223 study as categorized by Daniels et al. (.
Treatment and outcome of Graves’ disease developing after Alemtuzumab therapy.
| (%) | |
|---|---|
| Therapy of overt hyperthyroidism in Graves’ disease | |
Antithyroid drugs alone Antithyroid drugs + radiometabolic therapy (131-I) Radiometabolic therapy alone (131-I) Surgery (total thyroidectomy) | 40.1 12.2 6.1 4.0 |
| Outcome of | |
Spontaneous resolution with: Euthyroidism Hypothyroidism | 36.7 20.4 16.3 |
| Therapy of | |
Antithyroid drugs alone | 36.4 |
| Outcome of | 63.6 |
Spontaneous resolution Subclinical hypothyroidism Overt hypothyroidism Unknown | 18.2 18.2 18.2 9.1 |
Data elaborated from Daniels et al. (.
TSH-receptor antibodies (TRAb) and thyroid dysfunction during Alemtuzumab treatment.
| Patients and TRAb | (%) |
|---|---|
| Positive TRAb at baseline | 0.0 |
| 38.0 | |
| Thyroid dysfunction and TRAb status | |
Positive TRAb | 70.0 |
| Hyperthyroidism and TRAb status | |
Positive TRAb | 84.7 |
| Graves’ disease and TRAb status | |
Positive TRAb | 100 |
| Hypothyroidism and TRAb status | |
Positive TRAb | 76.7 |
Data elaborated from Daniels et al. (.
TPOAb and thyroid dysfunction during Alemtuzumab treatment.
| Patients and TPOAb | (%) |
|---|---|
Graves’ hyperthyroidism Hypothyroidism Destructive thyroiditis Euthyroidism | 31.2 |
Positive TPOAb at baseline Persistently positive TPOAb | 15.1 54.8 30.1 |
Data elaborated from Daniels et al. (.
Studies reporting Alemtuzumab-related thyroid dysfunction.
| Reference | No. of patients | No. of patients who developed thyroid dysfunctions | Thyroid function |
|---|---|---|---|
| Coles et al. ( | 27 | 9/27 (33%) | Hyperthyroidism: 9 (33%) |
| Coles et al. ( | 216 | 49/216 (22.7%) | Hyperthyroidism: 32 (14.8%) |
| Hypothyroidism: 15 (6.9%) | |||
| Coles et al. ( | 596 | 100/596 (16.7%) | Hyperthyroidism: 28 (4.7%) |
| Hypothyroidism: 31 (5.2%) | |||
| Cohen et al. ( | 376 | 68/376 (18%) | Hyperthyroidism: 28 (7%) |
| Hypothyroidism: 18 (5%) | |||
| Tuohy et al. ( | 87 | 35/87 (41%) | Hyperthyroidism: 22 (25.3%) |
| Hypothyroidism: 12 (13.8%) |
.
Case reports of patients developing autoimmune thyroid diseases following Alemtuzumab administration.
| Reference | Case(s) | Disease | Thyroid function | Thyroid Ab | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kirk et al. ( | 1 (F) | Kidney transplantation | Hyperthyroidism | TSH-RAb+ | Carbimazole |
| TgAb n/a | |||||
| TPOAb n/a | |||||
| Aranha et al. ( | 1 (F) | Multiple sclerosis (MS) | Hyperthyroidism | TSH-RAb+ | Carbimazole, thyroidectomy |
| 2 (F) | MS | Hyperthyroidism | TSH-RAb+ | Carbimazole, thyroidectomy | |
| 3 (F) | MS | Hyperthyroidism, then hypothyroidism | TSH-RAb+ | Carbimazole, then levothyroxine | |
| 4 (F) | MS | Hyperthyroidism | TSH-RAb+ | Carbimazole | |
| Tsourdi et al. ( | 1 (M) | MS | Hyperthyroidism | TSH-RAb+ | Thiamazole |
| 2 (F) | MS | Hyperthyroidism | TSH-RAb+ | Thiamazole, thyroidectomy | |
| 3 (F) | MS | Hyperthyroidism | TSH-RAb+ | Thiamazole, thyroidectomy | |
| 4 (M) | MS | Hyperthyroidism | TSH-RAb+ | Thiamazole, thyroidectomy | |
| 5 (F) | MS | Mild hyperthyroidism | TSH-RAb+ | No therapy | |
| Williams et al. ( | 1 (M) | Hematopoietic cell transplantation | Hypothyroidism | TSH-RAb n/a | Levothyroxine |
| 2 (M) | Hematopoietic cell transplantation | Hyperthyroidism | TSH-RAb− | Methimazole | |
| 3 (M) | Hematopoietic cell transplantation | Hyperthyroidism | TSH-RAb− | Methimazole | |
| Mahzari et al. ( | 1 (M) | MS | Hyperthyroidism, then hypothyroidism | TSH-RAb n/a | Propylthiouracil, then levothyroxine |
| 2 (F) | MS | Hyperthyroidism, then hypothyroidism | TSH-RAb n/a | No therapy, then levothyroxine | |
| 3 (F) | MS | Hyperthyroidism | TSH-RAb n/a | Methimazole | |
| 4 (F) | MS | Mild hyperthyroidism, then hypothyroidism | TSH-RAb n/a | No therapy, then levothyroxine | |
| Obermann et al. ( | 1 (M) | MS | Hyperthyroidism | TSH-RAb+ | Carbimazole |
| 2 (M) | MS | Subclinical hypothyroidism | TSH-RAb− | No therapy | |