Thyroid autoimmunity in chronic urticaria.

Br J Dermatol

St. John's Institute of Dermatology, St Thomas' Hospital, Lambeth Palace Road, London SE1 7EH, UK.

Published: August 2005

Background: Chronic urticaria (CU) is an autoimmune process in some patients. An association between CU and autoimmune thyroid disease has also previously been proposed. Our group has identified functionally significant histamine-releasing autoantibodies in one subset of CU patients (subset 1), predicted by positive autologous intradermal serum tests and positive histamine release from donor basophil leucocytes in vitro. Sera from a second subset of patients (subset 2), all of whom had positive autologous intradermal serum tests, failed to release histamine from donor basophils. A final disease subset (subset 3) has no identifiable skin reactivity (negative autologous serum skin test) or in vitro histamine releasing activity.

Objectives: In order to examine further the possible relationships between thyroid autoimmunity, thyroid dysfunction and CU, we have examined thyroid autoantibodies and thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) levels (an indirect measure of thyroid dysfunction) in the three CU subsets.

Patients/methods: We studied 182 patients (69% female), of whom 90 had a positive autologous intradermal serum test.

Results: Eighteen skin test-positive and four skin test-negative patients had thyroid microsomal antibodies (TMA). TSH outside the normal range was found in 13 skin test-positive and one skin test-negative patient. These findings represent clustering of TMA positivity [risk ratio (RR) 4.06, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.56-10.6] and of abnormal thyroid function (RR 15.5, CI 2.07-11.6) among the skin test-positive patients. However, in the overall study group an elevated TSH was present in seven patients (3.8%, CI 1.6-7.8) comparable to the 5% expected prevalence in the community. Thyroglobulin antibodies (TGA) were present in two of 182 patients.

Conclusions: There were significant differences between skin test-positive and skin test-negative patients with regard to autoimmune thyroid disease. Evidence for autoimmune thyroid disease and abnormal thyroid function was largely found among the skin test-positive patients, supporting the theory of an autoimmune aetiology in this group.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2133.2005.06646.xDOI Listing

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