Cargando…

SAT-613 Heterophile Antibody Interference Causing Elevated TSH Levels: A Challenging Diagnosis

Introduction Patients with persistently abnormal thyroid function tests despite increasing thyroid hormone supplementation should be investigated for several clinically important causes. We present an interesting such case in which widely fluctuating TSH measurements were caused by assay-interfering...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ansar, Muhammad, O’Neill, Brian, Halvorson, Tracy
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Endocrine Society 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6551948/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/js.2019-SAT-613
_version_ 1783424492511428608
author Ansar, Muhammad
O’Neill, Brian
Halvorson, Tracy
author_facet Ansar, Muhammad
O’Neill, Brian
Halvorson, Tracy
author_sort Ansar, Muhammad
collection PubMed
description Introduction Patients with persistently abnormal thyroid function tests despite increasing thyroid hormone supplementation should be investigated for several clinically important causes. We present an interesting such case in which widely fluctuating TSH measurements were caused by assay-interfering heterophile antibodies. Clinical Case A 57-year-old female with primary hypothyroidism was referred to our clinic for widely fluctuating TSH levels despite adjustment of levothyroxine dose. Indeed, her TSH levels over the previous year were as high as 24.56 μIU/ml (reference range 0.27-4.20) with normal or even elevated Free T4 (up to 1.64 ng/dl, reference range 0.70-1.48), but with no symptoms of hypo- or hyperthyroidism. Laboratory assessment at our institution revealed a TSH of 0.13 µIU/ml without change in the dose of levothyroxine since the prior measurement. It was assumed that the patient had trouble with medication compliance. Over the subsequent year, serial thyroid function tests (TFTs) done at an outside institution showed TSH elevated between 18-28 µIU/ml with elevated free T4 levels. Multiple possibilities were considered as the cause of discordant TFTs including poor compliance (although she denied missing any levothyroxine doses), thyroid hormone resistance syndrome, TSH producing tumor, interference from biotin supplementation and antibody interference. Upon further review, a pattern was evident in the TFTs, with marked elevations in TSH levels noted when labs were done locally, but normal or low TSH levels when done at our institution, raising the suspicion of interfering antibodies. The majority of commercially available TSH assays use an automated chemiluminescence system with two-site sandwich antibody assay. Antibodies including heterophile antibodies (human anti-mouse monoclonal antibodies or HAMAs), autoantibodies and rheumatoid factors can interfere with immunoassays. HAMAs are the most common cause of interference. Clinical laboratory personnel can employ several techniques to investigate potential antibody interference. In our case, the clinical pathologist ran the TSH assay with dilution analysis at our institution and showed a linear pattern, indicating no interference. However, a dilutional analysis of this same sample at the outside lab did not demonstrate dilutional linearity confirming the presence of an interfering antibody. Thus, the TSH values obtained at the outside institution were erroneous. The patient’s actual TSH was low at 0.21 µIU/ml, hence solving mystery of her discordant TFTs. Conclusion Interfering antibodies such as HAMAs should be suspected whenever thyroid function tests done at different laboratories conflict with each other, conflict with the clinical picture, or form an unusual pattern. Reference: N Bolstad et al. Best Pract Res Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2013; 27(5):647-61
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6551948
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher Endocrine Society
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-65519482019-06-13 SAT-613 Heterophile Antibody Interference Causing Elevated TSH Levels: A Challenging Diagnosis Ansar, Muhammad O’Neill, Brian Halvorson, Tracy J Endocr Soc Thyroid Introduction Patients with persistently abnormal thyroid function tests despite increasing thyroid hormone supplementation should be investigated for several clinically important causes. We present an interesting such case in which widely fluctuating TSH measurements were caused by assay-interfering heterophile antibodies. Clinical Case A 57-year-old female with primary hypothyroidism was referred to our clinic for widely fluctuating TSH levels despite adjustment of levothyroxine dose. Indeed, her TSH levels over the previous year were as high as 24.56 μIU/ml (reference range 0.27-4.20) with normal or even elevated Free T4 (up to 1.64 ng/dl, reference range 0.70-1.48), but with no symptoms of hypo- or hyperthyroidism. Laboratory assessment at our institution revealed a TSH of 0.13 µIU/ml without change in the dose of levothyroxine since the prior measurement. It was assumed that the patient had trouble with medication compliance. Over the subsequent year, serial thyroid function tests (TFTs) done at an outside institution showed TSH elevated between 18-28 µIU/ml with elevated free T4 levels. Multiple possibilities were considered as the cause of discordant TFTs including poor compliance (although she denied missing any levothyroxine doses), thyroid hormone resistance syndrome, TSH producing tumor, interference from biotin supplementation and antibody interference. Upon further review, a pattern was evident in the TFTs, with marked elevations in TSH levels noted when labs were done locally, but normal or low TSH levels when done at our institution, raising the suspicion of interfering antibodies. The majority of commercially available TSH assays use an automated chemiluminescence system with two-site sandwich antibody assay. Antibodies including heterophile antibodies (human anti-mouse monoclonal antibodies or HAMAs), autoantibodies and rheumatoid factors can interfere with immunoassays. HAMAs are the most common cause of interference. Clinical laboratory personnel can employ several techniques to investigate potential antibody interference. In our case, the clinical pathologist ran the TSH assay with dilution analysis at our institution and showed a linear pattern, indicating no interference. However, a dilutional analysis of this same sample at the outside lab did not demonstrate dilutional linearity confirming the presence of an interfering antibody. Thus, the TSH values obtained at the outside institution were erroneous. The patient’s actual TSH was low at 0.21 µIU/ml, hence solving mystery of her discordant TFTs. Conclusion Interfering antibodies such as HAMAs should be suspected whenever thyroid function tests done at different laboratories conflict with each other, conflict with the clinical picture, or form an unusual pattern. Reference: N Bolstad et al. Best Pract Res Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2013; 27(5):647-61 Endocrine Society 2019-04-30 /pmc/articles/PMC6551948/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/js.2019-SAT-613 Text en Copyright © 2019 Endocrine Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This article has been published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial, No-Derivatives License (CC BY-NC-ND; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Thyroid
Ansar, Muhammad
O’Neill, Brian
Halvorson, Tracy
SAT-613 Heterophile Antibody Interference Causing Elevated TSH Levels: A Challenging Diagnosis
title SAT-613 Heterophile Antibody Interference Causing Elevated TSH Levels: A Challenging Diagnosis
title_full SAT-613 Heterophile Antibody Interference Causing Elevated TSH Levels: A Challenging Diagnosis
title_fullStr SAT-613 Heterophile Antibody Interference Causing Elevated TSH Levels: A Challenging Diagnosis
title_full_unstemmed SAT-613 Heterophile Antibody Interference Causing Elevated TSH Levels: A Challenging Diagnosis
title_short SAT-613 Heterophile Antibody Interference Causing Elevated TSH Levels: A Challenging Diagnosis
title_sort sat-613 heterophile antibody interference causing elevated tsh levels: a challenging diagnosis
topic Thyroid
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6551948/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/js.2019-SAT-613
work_keys_str_mv AT ansarmuhammad sat613heterophileantibodyinterferencecausingelevatedtshlevelsachallengingdiagnosis
AT oneillbrian sat613heterophileantibodyinterferencecausingelevatedtshlevelsachallengingdiagnosis
AT halvorsontracy sat613heterophileantibodyinterferencecausingelevatedtshlevelsachallengingdiagnosis