4.6 Article

Screening of Organ-Specific Autoantibodies in a Large Cohort of Patients with Autoimmune Thyroid Diseases

Journal

THYROID
Volume 31, Issue 9, Pages 1416-1423

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/thy.2021.0170

Keywords

autoimmune; comorbidities; thyroid

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Health [RF-201102350673]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study aimed to investigate the prevalence and disease stage of autoimmune diseases in patients with ATD, identifying various organ-specific autoantibodies. The results showed that PCA and GADA were the most common autoantibodies, with all autoimmune diseases except celiac disease mainly at the potential stage. Sex, ATD type, smoking habit, and coexistence of other autoimmune diseases were associated with susceptibility to develop chronic atrophic gastritis or autoimmune diabetes mellitus.
Background: Autoimmune diseases tend to cluster in the same individual or in families. Four types of autoimmune polyglandular syndromes (APS) have been described based on the combination of endocrine and/or non-endocrine autoimmune diseases. In particular, type-3 APS is defined by the association of an autoimmune thyroid disease (ATD) and other autoimmune diseases and has a multifactorial etiology. The natural history of autoimmune diseases is characterized by three stages: potential, subclinical, and clinical. Methods: To determine the prevalence of organ-specific autoantibodies (anti-adrenal, anti-ovary [StCA], anti-pituitary [APA], anti-parietal cells [PCA], anti-tissue transglutaminase [tTGAb], anti-mitochondrial [AMA], anti-glutamic acid decarboxylase [GADA], anti-nicotinic acetylcholine receptor) in patients with ATD and to define the stage of the disease in patients with positive autoantibodies. From January 2016 to November 2018, 1502 patients (1302 female; age 52.7 +/- 14.7 [mean +/- standard deviation] years, range 18-86 years) with ATD (1285/1502 [85.6%] with chronic autoimmune thyroiditis and 217/1502 [14.4%] with Graves' disease) were prospectively enrolled. Results: The most common organ-specific autoantibodies were PCA (6.99%) and GADA (2.83%), while the prevalence of the remaining autoantibodies was <= 1%. All autoimmune diseases, but celiac disease, were predominant at the potential stage. Sex, ATD type, smoking habit, and coexistence of other autoimmune diseases correlated with the susceptibility to develop chronic atrophic gastritis (CAG) or autoimmune diabetes mellitus. Conclusions: The association between ATD and CAG was the most common manifestation of type-3 APS, mainly at the potential stage, that could lead to appropriate follow-up for early detection and timely treatment of the disease.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available