Thyroid autoantibodies: A good marker for the study of symptomless autoimmune thyroiditis

Abstract
In 3737 subjects without clinically thyroid disorders we evaluated the incidence of thyroid microsomal and thyroglobulin antibodies. These autoantibodies were found in 7% of a normal population, in 9% of patients with various non-autoimmune diseases, and in 11–16% of groups who either had or were at risk for autoimmune diseases: patients with IDDM, vitiligo, alopecia areata, idiopathic hypoparathyroidism, Addison's disease, and first-degree relatives of IDDM patients. Functional thyroid evaluation with TRH test was performed in 197 seropositive subjects and 144 seronegative controls. One-quarter (26%) of the subjects with thyroid autoantibodies showed functional abnormalities on TRH testing, whereas only 2.8% of the 144 seronegative controls showed subclinical hypothyroidism. After an observation period of 12–44 months, 102 persistently seropositive subjects were reassessed and 31% of them showed an impairment in TRH test response.