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A Yet Unrecognized Cause of Unusually High Levothyroxine Replacement Dose: Protein-Losing Enteropathy

BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVE: Large amount of protein wasting such as in nephrotic syndrome is a rare cause of high levothyroxine (LT4) replacement dose requirement. A case has been reported here that demonstrates that protein-losing enteropathy is a novel and yet unrecognized cause of high LT4 replacement...

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Autor principal: Yu, Run
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Association of Clinical Endocrinology 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10213611/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37251974
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aace.2023.04.004
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author Yu, Run
author_facet Yu, Run
author_sort Yu, Run
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description BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVE: Large amount of protein wasting such as in nephrotic syndrome is a rare cause of high levothyroxine (LT4) replacement dose requirement. A case has been reported here that demonstrates that protein-losing enteropathy is a novel and yet unrecognized cause of high LT4 replacement dose requirement. CASE REPORT: A 21-year-old man with congenital heart disease was found to have primary hypothyroidism and started LT4 replacement. His weight was approximately 60 kg. Nine months later, while he was taking LT4 100 μg daily, thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) level was >200 μIU/mL (normal range, 0.3-4.7 μIU/mL) and free thyroxine level was 0.3 ng/dL (normal range, 0.8-1.7 ng/dL). The patient had excellent medication compliance. LT4 dose was increased to 200 μg daily and then 200 and 300 μg every other day. Two months later, TSH level was 3.1 μIU/mL and free thyroxine level was 1.1 ng/dL. He did not exhibit malabsorption or proteinuria. His albumin levels had been low since the age of 18 years (mostly <2.5 g/dL). Stool α-1-antitrypsin levels and calprotectin levels were elevated on multiple occasions. Protein-losing enteropathy was diagnosed. DISCUSSION: As most circulating LT4 is protein-bound, loss of protein-bound LT4 due to protein-losing enteropathy is the most plausible cause of the large LT4 dose requirement in this case. CONCLUSION: This case demonstrates that protein-losing enteropathy, through loss of protein-bound thyroxine, is a novel and yet unrecognized cause of high LT4 replacement dose requirement. In patients who require high LT4 dose for unclear reasons, albumin levels should be examined and protein wasting be suspected in those with low albumin levels.
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spelling pubmed-102136112023-05-27 A Yet Unrecognized Cause of Unusually High Levothyroxine Replacement Dose: Protein-Losing Enteropathy Yu, Run AACE Clin Case Rep Case Report BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVE: Large amount of protein wasting such as in nephrotic syndrome is a rare cause of high levothyroxine (LT4) replacement dose requirement. A case has been reported here that demonstrates that protein-losing enteropathy is a novel and yet unrecognized cause of high LT4 replacement dose requirement. CASE REPORT: A 21-year-old man with congenital heart disease was found to have primary hypothyroidism and started LT4 replacement. His weight was approximately 60 kg. Nine months later, while he was taking LT4 100 μg daily, thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) level was >200 μIU/mL (normal range, 0.3-4.7 μIU/mL) and free thyroxine level was 0.3 ng/dL (normal range, 0.8-1.7 ng/dL). The patient had excellent medication compliance. LT4 dose was increased to 200 μg daily and then 200 and 300 μg every other day. Two months later, TSH level was 3.1 μIU/mL and free thyroxine level was 1.1 ng/dL. He did not exhibit malabsorption or proteinuria. His albumin levels had been low since the age of 18 years (mostly <2.5 g/dL). Stool α-1-antitrypsin levels and calprotectin levels were elevated on multiple occasions. Protein-losing enteropathy was diagnosed. DISCUSSION: As most circulating LT4 is protein-bound, loss of protein-bound LT4 due to protein-losing enteropathy is the most plausible cause of the large LT4 dose requirement in this case. CONCLUSION: This case demonstrates that protein-losing enteropathy, through loss of protein-bound thyroxine, is a novel and yet unrecognized cause of high LT4 replacement dose requirement. In patients who require high LT4 dose for unclear reasons, albumin levels should be examined and protein wasting be suspected in those with low albumin levels. American Association of Clinical Endocrinology 2023-04-13 /pmc/articles/PMC10213611/ /pubmed/37251974 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aace.2023.04.004 Text en © 2023 AACE. Published by Elsevier Inc. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Case Report
Yu, Run
A Yet Unrecognized Cause of Unusually High Levothyroxine Replacement Dose: Protein-Losing Enteropathy
title A Yet Unrecognized Cause of Unusually High Levothyroxine Replacement Dose: Protein-Losing Enteropathy
title_full A Yet Unrecognized Cause of Unusually High Levothyroxine Replacement Dose: Protein-Losing Enteropathy
title_fullStr A Yet Unrecognized Cause of Unusually High Levothyroxine Replacement Dose: Protein-Losing Enteropathy
title_full_unstemmed A Yet Unrecognized Cause of Unusually High Levothyroxine Replacement Dose: Protein-Losing Enteropathy
title_short A Yet Unrecognized Cause of Unusually High Levothyroxine Replacement Dose: Protein-Losing Enteropathy
title_sort yet unrecognized cause of unusually high levothyroxine replacement dose: protein-losing enteropathy
topic Case Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10213611/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37251974
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aace.2023.04.004
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