Wakeling J, Hall T, Williams TL. Correlation of thyroid hormone measurements with thyroid stimulating hormone stimulation test results in radioiodine-treated cats.
J Vet Intern Med 2020;
34:2265-2275. [PMID:
33044029 PMCID:
PMC7694841 DOI:
10.1111/jvim.15909]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 12/24/2019] [Revised: 09/02/2020] [Accepted: 09/15/2020] [Indexed: 02/06/2023] Open
Abstract
Background
Iatrogenic hypothyroidism can develop after radioiodine‐I131 (RAI) treatment of hyperthyroid cats and can be diagnosed using the thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) stimulation test.
Objectives
To assess the effect of noncritical illness on TSH stimulation test results in euthyroid and RAI‐treated cats. To assess the correlation of low total‐thyroxine (tT4), low free‐thyroxine (fT4), and high TSH concentrations with TSH stimulation test results.
Animals
Thirty‐three euthyroid adult cats and 118 client‐owned cats previously treated with RAI.
Methods
Total‐thyroxine, fT4, and TSH were measured, and a TSH stimulation test was performed in all cats. Euthyroid control cats were divided into apparently healthy and noncritical illness groups. RAI‐treated cats were divided into RAI‐hypothyroid (after‐stimulation tT4 ≤ 1.5 μg/dL), RAI‐euthyroid (after‐stimulation tT4 ≥ 2.3 μg/dL OR after‐stimulation tT4 1.5‐2.3 μg/dL and before : after tT4 ratio > 1.5), and RAI‐equivocal (after stimulation tT4 1.5‐2.3 μg/dL and tT4 ratio < 1.5) groups.
Results
Noncritical illness did not significantly affect the tT4 following TSH stimulation in euthyroid (P = .38) or RAI‐treated cats (P = .54). There were 21 cats in the RAI‐equivocal group. Twenty‐two (85%) RAI‐hypothyroid cats (n = 26) and 10/71 (14%) of RAI‐euthyroid cats had high TSH (≥0.3 ng/mL). Twenty‐three (88%) RAI‐hypothyroid cats had low fT4 (<0.70 ng/dL). Of the 5 (7%) RAI‐euthyroid cats with low fT4, only one also had high TSH. Only 5/26 (19%) RAI‐hypothyroid cats had tT4 below the laboratory reference interval (<0.78 μg/dL).
Conclusions and Clinical Relevance
The veterinary‐specific chemiluminescent fT4 immunoassay and canine‐specific TSH immunoassay can be used to aid in the diagnosis of iatrogenic hypothyroidism in cats.
Collapse