TSH is the hormone which is usually tested. It is the only test funded by the Medicare Benefits Scheme to screen for thyroid disease when there is no history of thyroid problems.
Thyroid stimulating hormone
TSH is a sensitive marker of thyroid function because it is influenced by small changes in free T4concentrations. A low TSH usually indicates hyperthyroidism whereas raised TSH usually means hypothyroidism. Over the years the lowest concentration of TSH which can be detected by assays has progressively fallen, allowing better separation of normal and hyperthyroid states.
Thyroid hormone assays
Only very small fractions of thyroid hormones are not bound to protein. These free thyroid hormones are the physiologically important thyroid hormones in blood. Modern immunoassays that estimate free hormone concentrations are widely available.
Changes in serum albumin concentrations, abnormal binding proteins, free fatty acids and drugs such as heparin, frusemide and phenytoin may interfere with these assays. Most laboratories now use chemiluminescent methods that are more (but not completely) resistant to such interference. When results do not fit into a recognised pattern the laboratory should be consulted to identify such interferences.
Thyroid-related autoantibodies
If a person has altered thyroid function, testing for thyroid antibodies helps to determine if they have an autoimmune condition.
Thyroperoxidase autoantibodies
Thyroperoxidase antibodies are also known as thyroid microsomal antibodies. They are present in autoimmune thyroid disease, but there is debate about whether low levels are always pathological. Unfortunately, there are significant differences between laboratories when the same sera are studied, and lower detection limits are variable. Assay sensitivities and reference ranges can therefore vary quite widely.
Thyroperoxidase antibodies can cause hypothyroidism in at least two ways. Firstly they can block thyroperoxidase thereby inhibiting T4and T3synthesis and secondly through antibody-dependent cell cytotoxicity and thyroid inflammation. Low concentrations may not be associated with evidence of thyroid dysfunction, but the incidence of raised TSH increases as antibody levels rise. The prevalence of positive antibody levels and mild hypothyroidism increases with age.
The concentration of thyroperoxidase antibodies may fluctuate in patients with autoimmune thyroid disease. This has no clinical significance and repeated measurements are not recommended. Maternal thyroperoxidase antibodies cross the placenta, but their effects on fetal thyroid function are unclear.
Thyroglobulin autoantibodies
Thyroglobulin autoantibodies are also a marker of autoimmune thyroid disease, but are less common than thyroperoxidase antibodies. Thyroglobulin autoantibodies do not inhibit thyroperoxidase or mediate antibody-dependent cell cytotoxicity and are therefore markers rather than mediators of autoimmune thyroid disease. There are considerable variations in sensitivity and reference ranges between assays. Other autoimmune diseases can also increase the concentration of thyroglobulin autoantibodies.
TSH receptor autoantibodies
TSH receptor autoantibodies may stimulate or less commonly block the TSH receptor. Stimulating antibodies cause Graves' disease and probably also cause the associated ophthalmopathy. Blocking antibodies can cause hypothyroidism. The assay of TSH receptor autoantibodies done in clinical laboratories cannot distinguish between stimulating or blocking antibodies. This is not usually relevant as clinical hyperthyroidism would suggest that the dominant antibody is stimulatory.
Measuring TSH receptor autoantibodies can be useful if the cause of hyperthyroidism is not apparent. However, initial hopes that remission of Graves' could be predicted by falling autoantibody levels have not been supported by most studies.
Measurements of TSH receptor autoantibodies do have an important role in managing pregnant women with Graves' disease. High concentrations of maternal TSH receptor autoantibodies can predict fetal and neonatal hyperthyroidism. It is important to recognise that TSH receptor autoantibodies do not always fall after successful treatment, so pregnant women with a previous history of Graves' disease should be screened for TSH receptor autoantibodies.
Thyroglobulin
Thyroglobulin, a large glycoprotein, represents about 80% of the wet weight of the thyroid and is co-secreted with thyroid hormone. Concentrations are high in patients with raised TSH concentrations or nodular goitres, but it is not clinically useful to measure thyroglobulin in these situations.
Most papillary and follicular carcinomas synthesise and secrete thyroglobulin, but raised thyroglobulin levels are not a reliable indicator or screening test for thyroid malignancy. Thyroglobulin concentration becomes a useful marker of remaining or recurrent cancer in patients who have had a total thyroidectomy and remnant ablation with radioiodine for papillary and follicular carcinoma.
Unfortunately, up to 20% of patients with differentiated thyroid cancer have thyroglobulin autoantibodies that interfere with the thyroglobulin assay, leading to underestimation of thyroglobulin concentration. Thyroglobulin autoantibodies should therefore be measured, with a sensitive assay, on all thyroglobulin samples.
Reference ranges
As most commercial assays do not physically measure the analyte, results given are always an approximation of actual levels. Each assay, even for the same analyte, will therefore give slightly different results because of intrinsic variations in the reagents used and the effects of interfering illnesses and substances. Free T3levels are the most variable between assay methods.