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Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, Vol 72, 1113-1116, Copyright © 1991 by Endocrine Society


ARTICLES

A study of the serum concentration of tumor necrosis factor-alpha in thyroidal and nonthyroidal illnesses

IJ Chopra, S Sakane and GN Teco
Department of Medicine, University of California School of Medicine, Los Angeles 90024.

We have studied serum concentrations of immunoassayable tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF alpha) and iodothyronines (T4, T3, and rT3) in normal subjects (n = 16) and patients with nonthyroidal illnesses (NTI; n = 13), hyperthyroidism (n = 10), and hypothyroidism (n = 9). The mean (+/- SEM; femtomoles per mL) serum concentration of TNF alpha was 45 +/- 4.3 in normal subjects, 84 +/- 38 in NTI, 54 +/- 6.0 in hyperthyroidism, and 50 +/- 10 in hypothyroidism; the various values did not differ significantly from one another. Serum TNF alpha was well within the normal range in all NTI patients, except one patient with a brain glioma and infection in whom it was elevated (540 fmol/mL). There was no significant correlation between serum TNF alpha and serum T4, T3, or rT3 levels in NTI patients. Similarly, there was no correlation between serum TNF alpha and serum thyroid hormone (T3 or T4) levels when data in normal subjects were combined with those in NTI patients. The dialyzable fraction of T3 and the free T3 concentration did not correlate with serum TNF alpha levels. However, there was a tendency toward a positive correlation between dialyzable fraction of T4 and the serum concentration of TNF alpha in NTI (r = 0.54; n = 11; 0.05 greater than P less than 0.1). The relationship between these two parameters became more clear when data in normal subjects and NTI patients were combined for statistical analysis (r = 0.59; n = 22; P less than 0.005). The free T4 concentration correlated positively with serum TNF alpha levels whether the data in NTI patients were analyzed alone (r = 0.93; P less than 0.001) or in combination with data from normal subjects (r = 0.85; P less than 0.001). Our data suggest that circulating TNF alpha may contribute to elevated free T4 in NTI. However, it is not a universal or common factor in the pathogenesis of other alterations in serum thyroid hormone levels in NTI (euthyroid sickness syndrome).


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