ESPE2016 Poster Presentations Thyroid P2 (49 abstracts)
Hofsta Northwell School of Medicine, New Hyde Park, New York, USA
Background: The frequency of thyroid disease is elevated in patients with Downs syndrome starting in the newborn period where it is 0.7% (28× more frequent than in the general population). Most commonly, thyroid dysfunction in Downs Syndrome includes primary hypothyroidism, pituitaryhypothalamic hypothyroidism, TBG deficiency and chronic lymphocytic thyroiditis. The incidence of Graves disease is believed to be between 0.1 and 3 per 100 000 children in the general population. Autoimmune thyroid disease is uncommon in young children with Downs syndrome less than 8 years of age with hyperthyroidism being quite rare.
Objective and hypotheses: To determine if yearly screening labs done on a 15 month old female with Downs syndrome who has a strong family history of autoimmune thyroid disease with initial lab values of TSH=5.77 and FT4=1.77 is due to Hashimotos thyrotoxicosis, Graves hyperthyroidism or transient. My hypothesis was that this was due to autoimmune thyroiditis given the elevated FT4 and strong family history.
Method: To obtain thyroid stimulating immunoglobulins, thyroglobulin antibodies and thyroid peroxidase antibodies and to observe TSH and FT4 over time for progression.
Results: Lost to follow up until age 21 months when labs obtained: TSH=<0.001 μU/ml, FT4=2.25 ng/dl (nl<1.6), TT3=215 ng/dl (High), TT4=16.4 μg/dl (4.512.0), TGAB<20 IU/ml, TPO AB=167 IU/ml (nl<9), TSI=284 (nl<140). Patient started on methimazole 2.5 mg qd with labs 2 weeks later showing a TSH<0.001 and FT4 of 2.52. Methimazole increased to 5 mg qd.
Conclusion: Given progression of hyperthyroidism over a 6.5 month time course even after starting on methimazole, in a patient with highly positive TSI antibodies, this is very likely to be autoimmune hyperthyroidism caused by Graves disease. To my knowledge, this is the youngest known patient with DS to have autoimmune hyperthyroidism to date. Family history of autoimmune disease may make DS patients even more susceptible to development of autoimmune thyroiditis at an earlier age.