4.4 Review

An update on the pathogenesis of Hashimoto's thyroiditis

期刊

JOURNAL OF ENDOCRINOLOGICAL INVESTIGATION
卷 44, 期 5, 页码 883-890

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s40618-020-01477-1

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Hashimoto’ s thyroiditis; Autoimmunity; Thyroid antibodies

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Recent studies have provided new insights into the genetic, environmental, and pathogenic mechanisms of HT, including the identification of multiple cytokine networks, various defects in T regulatory cells, and possible disease associations. Additionally, there is growing evidence suggesting a direct role of the autoimmune process in causing persistent symptoms in a subset of patients with levothyroxine-treated HT.
It is 70 years since Noel Rose embarked on his pioneering studies that lead to the discovery of autoimmune thyroiditis and the elucidation of Hashimoto's thyroiditis. This short review to honour his passing focuses on the developments in our understanding of the causes and pathogenesis of HT over the last five years. Recent genetic studies have reported heritability estimates for HT and associated diseases for the first time, and emphasised the complexity of the genetic factors involved, including monogenic forms of HT. Environmental factors continue to be elucidated, especially as a side effect of drugs which modulate the immune system therapeutically. Regarding pathogenetic mechanisms, multiple cytokine networks have been identified which involve the thyroid cells in a circuit of escalating proinflammatory effects, such as the expression of inflammasome components, and an array of different defects in T regulatory cells may underlie the loss of self-tolerance to thyroid autoantigens. Finally, a number of studies have revealed fresh insights into disease associations with HT which may have both pathological and clinical significance, the most intriguing of which is a possible direct role of the autoimmune process itself in causing some of the persistent symptoms reported by a minority of patients with levothyroxine-treated HT.

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