The document discusses thyroid function testing. It describes the thyroid gland and the hormones it secretes. It then covers the different types of thyroid function tests, including measurements of circulating hormone levels, tests of thyroid gland function and the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis, tests of autoimmunity, and miscellaneous tests. It discusses the indications, abnormalities, and clinical features associated with hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism.
2. THYROID GLAND
• The thyroid gland is an endocrine gland in the neck consisting of two connected lobes.
• The lower two thirds of the lobes are connected by a thin band of tissue called the thyroid isthmus.
• The thyroid is located at the front of the neck, below the Adam's apple. Microscopically, the functional
unit of the thyroid gland is the spherical thyroid follicle, lined with follicular cells (thyrocytes), and
occasional parafollicular cells that surround a lumen containing colloid.
• THYROID HORMONES:
• The thyroid gland secretes three hormones: the two thyroid hormones – triiodothyronine
(T3) and thyroxine (T4) – and a peptide hormone, calcitonin.
• The thyroid hormones influence the metabolic rate and protein synthesis, and in children, growth and
development.
• Calcitonin plays a role in calcium homeostasis.
• Secretion of the two thyroid hormones is regulated by thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), which is
secreted from the anterior pituitary gland. TSH is regulated by thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH),
which is produced by the hypothalamus.
4. THYROID FUNCTION TEST (TFT)
• Thyroid function tests are usually done to find out whether the thyroid gland
is working properly.
• This is mainly to diagnose an underactive thyroid gland (hypothyroidism)
and an overactive thyroid gland (hyperthyroidism).
• The principal laboratory tests recommended in the initial evaluation of
thyroid disorders are the TSH and the FT4 levels.
• Positive thyroid antibodies indicate an autoimmune thyroid etiology.
• Adjuncts to the previous tests include the total T3 (TT3), free T3 (FT3) or
FT3 index (FT3I), RAIU and scan, TRAb, ultrasound, and FNA biopsy
5. TFT CLASSIFICATION
MEASUREMENT OF
CIRCULATING
HORMONE LEVELS
Free Thyroxine (FT4)
Free Thyroxine Index (FT4I)
Total Thyroxine (TT4)
Total Triiodothyronine (TT3)
Free Triiodothyronine (FT3)
Free Triiodothyronine Index
(FT3I)
TESTS OF THYROID
GLAND FUNCTION
radioactive iodine
uptake (RAIU)
Scan
TEST OF
HYPOTHALAMIC-
PITUITARY-THYROID
AXIS
thyroid-stimulating hormone
(TSH)
7. MEASUREMENT OF CIRCULATING HORMONE
LEVELS
Tests Measures Normal Comments
FT4 Direct measurement of free
thyroxine
0.7–1.9 ng/dL (9–24 pmol/L) Most accurate determination of
FT4 levels; might be higher
than normal in patients on
thyroxine replacement
FT4I Calculated free thyroxine index T4 uptake method: 6.5–12.5
TT4 × RT3U method: 1.3–4.2
Estimates direct FT4
measurement; compensates for
alterations in TBG
TT4 Total free and bound T4 5–12 mcg/dL (64–154 mmol/L) Specific and sensitive test if no
alterations in TBG
TT3 Total free and bound T3 70–132 ng/dL (1.1–2 nmol/L) Useful in detecting early,
relapsing, and T3 toxicosis.
Not useful in evaluation of
hypothyroidism
FT3 Direct measurement of free T3 0.2–0.42 ng/dL (3.5–6.5
pmol/L)
Most accurate determination of
FT4 levels; might be lower than
normal in patients on thyroxine
replacement
FT3I Calculated free T3 index 17.5–46 Estimates direct FT3
measurement; compensates for
alterations in TBG
8. TESTS OF THYROID GLAND FUNCTION
Tests Measures Normals Comments
RAIU Gland’s use of
iodine after trace
dose of either 123I or
131I
5%–35% Useful in
hyperthyroidism to
determine RAI dose
in Graves’; does not
provide information
regarding hormone
synthesis
Scan Gland size, shape,
and tissue activity
after 123I or 99mTc
— Useful in nodular
disease to detect
“cold” or “hot” areas
9. TEST OF HYPOTHALAMIC-PITUITARY-
THYROID AXIS
Tests Measures Normal Comments
ATgA Antibodies to
thyroglobulin
<1 IU/mL Present in
autoimmune thyroid
disease;
undetectable during
remission
TPO Thyroperoxidase
antibodies
<1 IU/mL More sensitive of
the two antibodies;
titers detectable
even after remission
TRAb Thyroid receptor
stimulating
antibody
<125% Confirms Graves’
disease; detects risk
of neonatal Graves’
10. TEST OF HYPOTHALAMIC-PITUITARY-
THYROID AXIS
Tests Measures Normal Comments
TSH Pituitary TSH level 0.5–5 μU/mL Most sensitive index
for hyperthyroidism,
hypothyroidism, and
replacement therapy
MISCELLANEOUS
Tests Measures Normal Comments
Thyroglobulin Colloid protein of
normal thyroid
gland
<56 ng/mL Marker for recurrent
thyroid cancer or
metastases in
thyroidectomized
patients
11. INDICATIONS OF TFT
• Diagnosing thyroid disorder in symptomatic person
• Screening newborns for hypothyroidism
• Monitoring thyroid replacement in hypothyroidism patients
• Diagnosis and monitoring female infertility patients
• Screening adults for thyroid disorders
19. TSH
• First line test in thyroid function test
• Normal TSH level excludes thyroid dysfunction
• TSH used alone as a first line test will miss unsuspected cases of secondary
hypothyroidism , therefore combine TSH and T4 as first line tests.
• Uses:
• Screening for euthyroidism
• Screening for hypothyroidism in newborns
• Diagnosis of primary and secondary hypothyroidism
• Diagnosis of clinical and subclinical hyperthyroidism
• Follow up of T3 and T4 replacement therapy in hypothyroidism
21. TOTAL THYROXINE
• Includes free thyroxine and protein bound thyroxine
• The FT4 are the most reliable tests for the evaluation of
hormone concentrations, especially when thyroid hormone
binding abnormalities exist.
• falsely elevated levels of TT4 are common in the euthyroid
pregnant woman .
24. FREE AND TOTAL T3
• Normal plasma level of T3 are very low
• Metabolically more active, shorter half life, faster turn over
• Free T3 0.5% of total
• The FT3 is most useful in hyperthyroidism but can be normal or low
in hypothyroidism
• TT3 is often low in older patients and in many acute and chronic
nonthyroidal illnesses because the peripheral conversion of T4 to T3
is decreased.
• The TT3 is particularly helpful in detecting early relapse of Graves’
disease and in confirming the diagnosis of hyperthyroidism despite
normal TT4 levels.
• Uses:
25.
26. THYROGLOBULIN
• Reflects thyroid mass, thyroid injury, TSH receptor stimulation
• INCREASED IN:
• Graves disease
• Thyroiditis
• Nodular goiter
• INDICATIONS:
• Monitoring recurrence of certain variants of thyroid ca
• Thyroid dysgenesis in congenital hypothyroidism
• Follow up of patients with thyroid malignancy
28. ANTIMICROSOMAL ANTIBODIES
• Positive in grave’s disease and hashimoto’s thyroiditis
• More frequently positive for autoimmune diseases than Tg Ab
THYROID RECEPTOR ANTIBODY
• Types:
• TBI (grave’s disease)
• TSIgs -
• grave’s disease
• Predicting relapse or remission in hyperthyroid
• Develoopment of neonatal hyperthyroidism
29. RADIOIODINE UPTAKE STUDIES
- correlates with functional activity of thyroid gland
- tracer dose of I131 orally followed by measurement of amount of radioactivity over thyroid gland
at 2hrs and again at 24hrs
- normal radioactive uptake is 20-40% of administered dose at 24hr
INCREASED UPTAKE
• Hyperthyroidism due to
grave’s disease
• Toxic MNG
• Toxic adenoma
• TSH secreting tumor
DECREASED UPTAKE
• Hypothyroidism
• Subacute thyroiditis
• Large I2 doses , thyroid
hormone
• Factitious hyperthyroidism
30. TRH STIMULATION TEST
• Uses:
• confirms diagnosis of secondary hypothyroidism
• Evaluation of suspected hypothalamic disease
• Procedure:
• TRH injected iv (200ug) followed by measurement of serum TSH at 20
and 60 min
• Interpretation:
• Primary hypothyroidism - exaggerated and prolonged response
• Secondary hypothyroidism - blunted response
• Tertiary hypothyroidism - response is delayed
31. T3 SUPPRESSION TEST
• Use:
• Differentiates borderline high normal form primary
hyperthyroidism
TSH STIMULATION TEST
Use:
Differentiates primary from secondary hypothyroidism
32. THYROID SCAN
• Uses:
• Functional classification of nodules – warm, hot, cold
• Provides information regarding size, shape, position of gland
• Identification and localisation of functioning thyroid tissue in
ectopic or metastatic sites
• Helps in differentiating various causes of thyrotoxicosis
33. INDICATIONS OF THYROID SCAN
• Thyroid nodule
• Diffuse or multinodular goiter
• Clinical hypo or hyperthyroidism
• Rule out ectopic thyroid tissue
• Subacute thyroiditis, early phase
• Contraindications:
• Pregnancy
• lactation
35. MEASUREMENTS OF FREE AND TOTAL SERUM
HORMONE LEVELS - FREE THYROXINE, FREE THYROXINE
INDEX, FREE TRIIODOTHYRONINE, AND FREE TRIIODOTHYRONINE
INDEX
• The FT4 and FT3 are the most reliable tests for the evaluation of
hormone concentrations, especially when thyroid hormone binding
abnormalities exist.
• The FT3 is most useful in hyperthyroidism but can be normal or low
in hypothyroidism.
• If a direct measure of the free hormone levels are not available, the
estimated free hormone indices (FT4I, FT3I) can provide comparable
information.
• However, these indices do not correct for changes observed in
patients with “euthyroid sick” nonthyroidal illnesses whose TBG
binding affinity is altered. In these circumstances, the FT4 and FT3
36. TOTAL THYROXINE AND TOTAL
TRIIODOTHYRONINE
• The total thyroxine (TT4) and total triiodothyronine (TT3) measure both free and bound
(total) serum T4 and T3.
• Because the bound fraction is the major fraction measured, situations that change the
hormone’s affinity for TBG or the TBG level will influence the results.
• For example, falsely elevated levels of TT4 and TT3 are common in the euthyroid
pregnant woman .
• In addition, the TT3 is often low in older patients and in many acute and chronic
nonthyroidal illnesses because the peripheral conversion of T4 to T3 is decreased.
• Therefore, careful interpretation of these tests is necessary in situations that alter thyroid
hormone binding, TBG levels, or T4 to T3 conversion.
• The TT3 is particularly helpful in detecting early relapse of Graves’ disease and in
confirming the diagnosis of hyperthyroidism despite normal TT4 levels.
• The TT3 is not a good indicator of hypothyroidism because TT3 can be normal.
37. THYROID AUTOANTIBODIES
• These are markers of autoimmune thyroid disease.
• Antithyroid microsomal antibodies have been identified as antithyroid
peroxidase (ANTITPO) antibodies.
• Antimicrosomal antibodies are much more sensitive than antithyroglobulin
antibodies and are present in around 45–80% of Graves’ disease and 80–95%
of Hashimoto’s disease/atrophic thyroiditis.
• Increasingly, labs are measuring anti-TPO directly as their only antibody
test. Note that anti-TSH receptor antibodies—the cause of Graves’ disease—
are difficult to measure and not routinely assayed. Although they are the
most reliable test for diagnosing Graves’ disease, currently their only
definite indications are to determine the cause of thyroid disease in
pregnancy and the post-partum period and assess the risk of neonatal
38. THYROID FUNCTION TESTING
• An undetectable TSH level and a free T3 level are required to
diagnose hyperthyroidism.
• In milder cases, T4 levels may be in the normal range (‘T3
toxicosis’).
• Normal TSH levels with 4 T4 and T3 are seen in TSHsecreting
pituitary tumours (very rare) or in patients with thyroid
hormone resistance (also very rare).
40. ANTI-TSH RECEPTOR ANTIBODY TESTING
• This test is not routinely available in most labs. Although it is
positive in >90% of cases of Graves’ disease, in most cases it
does not alter clinical management. Indications include
distinguishing gestational thyrotoxicosis or post-partum
thyroiditis from Graves’ disease, indicating the risk of neonatal
thyrotoxicosis and (controversial) predicting recurrence after a
course of thionamide drug therapy
41. BIOCHEMICAL DIAGNOSIS
• 4 TSH with T4 in the normal range is referred to as subclinical
hypothyroidism. 4 TSH with 5 T4 is overt hypothyroidism. 5 T4
with TSH in the normal range may be due to pituitary failure (2°
hypothyroidism) and if Repeat tests in 6 weeks Now eu-/
hypothyroid Spontaneously resolving thyroiditis
Hyperthyroidism confirmed (suppressed TSH, raised free T3)
Short history (
42. DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS (CAUSES)
• n iodine sufficient countries, the vast majority of spontaneous
hypothyroidism is due to autoimmune thyroiditis (Hashimoto’s
disease if goitre present, atrophic thyroiditis if goitre absent)—
antithyroid antibodies present in 80–90% of cases. Other common
causes are post-thyroidectomy, post-radioiodine therapy and side
effects of amiodarone or lithium. Rarer causes include treatment with
cytokines (e.g. interferons, GM-CSF, interleukin-2), vast excess
iodine intake (iodine drops, water purifying tablets), congenital
hypothyroidism (caused by a variety of genetic defects, should be
detected by neonatal screening programme), iodine deficiency
(urinary iodide excretion
43. DIAGNOSTIC CATCHES
• 4 TSH and 5 T4 always represents hypothyroidism. If the TSH alone is 4 and
the T4 is not even slightly low, a heterophile antibody interfering in the TSH
assay may be present in the patient’s serum. This is especially likely if there
is no change in TSH level after thyroxine treatment but the T4 level rises
(confirming compliance with tablets). For unusual patterns of thyroid
function tests, see Fig. 2.14. Note that within the first 1–3 months (or
longer) after treatment of hyperthyroidism, profound hypothyroidism may
develop with a 5 T4 but the TSH may still be suppressed or only mildly
raised due to the long period of TSH suppression prior to treatment. Raised
TSH alone with disproportionate symptoms of lethargy may be seen in
hypoadrenalism. If suspected treat with steroids first as thyroxine may
precipitate an Addisonian crisis.
44. • Transient hypothyroidism
• Transient or self-resolving hypothyroidism, often preceded by
hyperthyroidism, is seen in viral thyroiditis, after pregnancy
(post-partum thyroiditis) and in some individuals with
autoimmune thyroiditis (positive antithyroid antibodies).
Treatment temporarily with thyroxine is only required if the
patient is very symptomatic. Thyroid function should return to
normal within 6 months. Hypothyroidism may also be transient
in the first 6 months after radioiodine therapy.
45. SUBCLINICAL HYPOTHYROIDISM
• A raised TSH (<20mU/L) with normal T4/T3 is very common and
seen in 5–10% of women and ~2% of males. It is usually due to
subclinical autoimmune thyroid disease and is frequently discovered
on routine testing. In randomised trials, ~20% of patients obtain
psychological benefit from beginning T4 therapy, in many others it is
probably truly asymptomatic. If antithyroid antibodies are detectable,
the rate of progression to overt hypothyroidism is ~50% at 20 years,
but higher than this with higher initial TSH levels. If the TSH alone is
raised with negative antibodies (or the TSH is normal with raised
antibodies alone), overt hypothyroidism develops in 25% at 20 years.
A reasonable approach is a trial of thyroxine
46. HYPOTHYROIDISM AND PREGNANCY
• Overt hypothyroidism is associated with poor obstetric outcomes
• subclinical hypothyroidism is associated with a slight reduction in the baby’s IQ and
should be treated.
• Many authorities advocate screening for hypothyroidism in all antenatal patients as early
as possible in pregnancy.
• Patients on T4 need to increase their dose by 50g from the first trimester of pregnancy.
• Maternal thyroxine can compensate for fetal thyroid failure in utero but congenital
hypothyroidism must be detected at birth (screening test) to avoid mental retardation.
• Where the mother and fetus are both hypothyroid—most commonly due to iodine
deficiency—mental retardation can develop in utero (cretinisim).
• Mothers with positive antithyroid antibodies and/or subclinical hypothyroidism have a
50% chance of developing (transient) post-partum thyroiditis.
47. THYROID FUNCTION TEST RESULTS IN
DIFFERENT THYROID CONDITIONS
Total
T4
Free T4 Total T3 T3 Resin
Uptake
Free
Thyroxine
Index
TSH
Normal 4.5–
10.9
mcg/dL
0.8–2.7
ng/dL
60–181
ng/dL
22% to 34% 1.0–4.3
units
0.5–
4.7
mIU/L
Hyperthyroi
d
↑↑ ↑↑ ↑↑↑ ↑ ↑↑↑ ↓↓
Hypothyroid ↓↓ ↓↓ ↓ ↓↓ ↓↓↓ ↑↑
Increased
TBG
↑ Normal ↑ ↓ Normal Normal
49. CASES TO AVOID TFT
• In very ill patients, especially in intensive care, a pattern of ‘sick
euthyroidism’ is often seen, with low TSH levels, low free T3 levels
and sometimes low free T4 levels.
• Accurate interpretation of true thyroid status is impossible.
• A raised free T3 level in a very ill patient suggests significant
hyperthyroidism and a very raised TSH (>20mU/L) with undetectable
free T4 levels suggests profound hypothyroidism.
• Other changes should be interpreted with extreme caution and the
tests repeated after recovery
50. FACTORS THAT CAN SIGNIFICANTLY ALTER
THYROID FUNCTION TESTS IN EUTHYROID
PATIENTS