ESPE Abstracts (2024) 98 P1-200

ESPE2024 Poster Category 1 Thyroid 2 (9 abstracts)

Severe congenital hypothyroidism due to a novel homozygous variant affecting the conserved CAGYC region of TSHβ

Maria Barskaya 1 , Nina Makretskaya 2 , Elena Demina 1 , Elena Petryaykina 1 & Anatoly Tiulpakov 2,1


1Russian Children's Clinical Hospital, Moscow, Russia. 2Research Centre for Medical Genetics, Moscow, Russia


Background: Central congenital hypothyroidism (CCH) is a rare disorder. It may be a component of multiple pituitary hormone deficiency or (more rarely) represent an isolated entity, for which several monogenic causes are described.

Aims: We report here a case of severe hypothyroidism caused by a novel homozygous variant in the TSHB gene.

Results: The proband, a male from a consanguineous family of Turkish ancestry, was born at the 41st week of gestation with the weight 4560 g and the length 56 cm. At 3 months a delay of motor development became evident. Investigations for suspected congenital myopathy and inborn errors of metabolism revealed no positive findings. At 7 months, the patient presented with macroglossia, muscle weakness, severe developmental delay and oedema. His height was 59 cm (SDS=-4.5), the weight 7.4 kg (BMI SDS=2.3). Serum fT4 was below the limit of detection of 5.0 pmol/L, TSH was 0.001 mU/L. Levothyroxine 50 ug/day resulted in rapid disappearance of macroglossia and oedema and improvement of psychomotor development. At 10 months the height was 73 cm (SDS=-0.7), the weight 10 kg (BMI SDS=0.9), serum fT4, 13.1 pmol/L. DNA sequencing showed a novel homozygous NM_000549.5: c.152G>A variant predicted to cause p.Cys51Tyr substitution in the TSHβ. Cys51 is the last residue of the highly conserved CAGYC region of TSHβ, which in turn is a core part of the so-called cysteine knot sequence, essential for the structural integrity of glycoprotein hormones.

Conclusions: In conclusion, we described a case of CCH caused by a novel homozygous variant affecting the third cysteine knot residue of TSHβ. The case confirms the association of pathogenic TSHB variants with severe clinical presentation of congenital hypothyroidism.

Volume 98

62nd Annual ESPE (ESPE 2024)

Liverpool, UK
16 Nov 2024 - 18 Nov 2024

European Society for Paediatric Endocrinology 

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