Ericsson UB, Christensen SB, Thorell JI. A high prevalence of thyroglobulin autoantibodies in adults with and without thyroid disease as measured with a sensitive solid-phase immunosorbent radioassay.
CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY AND IMMUNOPATHOLOGY 1985;
37:154-62. [PMID:
3930112 DOI:
10.1016/0090-1229(85)90146-1]
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Abstract
Sera from 228 patients with thyroid disease and 140 healthy subjects without clinical or biochemical evidence of thyroid disease, were tested using a sensitive solid-phase immunosorbent radioassay (RIA) and a passive hemagglutination test (TRC test) for thyroglobulin antibodies (Tg-ab). With the RIA technique, Tg-ab was found in 27% of the controls (36% of the women and 15% of the men), whereas only 0.7% of them were Tg-ab positive with the TRC test. All individuals with primary hypothyroidism were Tg-ab positive with the RIA, compared with only 56% with the TRC test. Tg-ab (RIA) were found in 43/53 (81%) of the patients with toxic diffuse goiter, and in 30-40% of the patients with toxic nodular goiter, toxic adenoma, atoxic goiter, and thyroid carcinoma, the TRC test being positive in 10-17% of these patients. The high prevalence of Tg-ab in the healthy population suggests that subclinical thyroiditis is more frequent than has been assumed from antibody measurements made with less sensitive methods, and is in agreement with the prevalences reported from autopsy studies.
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