AUTHOR=Kristan Megan M. , Toro-Tobon David , Francis Nnenia , Desale Sameer , Bikas Athanasios , Jonklaas Jacqueline , Goyal Rachna M.
TITLE=Immunotherapy-Associated Hypothyroidism: Comparison of the Pre-Existing With De-Novo Hypothyroidism
JOURNAL=Frontiers in Endocrinology
VOLUME=13
YEAR=2022
URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/endocrinology/articles/10.3389/fendo.2022.798253
DOI=10.3389/fendo.2022.798253
ISSN=1664-2392
ABSTRACT=BackgroundImmunotherapy has revolutionized the treatment of solid malignancies, but is associated with endocrine-related adverse events. This study aims to dissect the natural course of immunotherapy-induced hypothyroidism and provide guidance regarding diagnosis and management in patients with and without pre-existing hypothyroidism.
MethodsA retrospective analysis was conducted using patients who received immunotherapy between 2010‐2019 within a multicenter hospital system. Participants were separated in three groups—those with pre-existing hypothyroidism, those who developed primary hypothyroidism and those with hypophysitis within a year of their first immunotherapy. Serial effects of immunotherapy on thyroid function tests (TFTs) and levothyroxine dosing were evaluated.
Results822 patients were screened, with 85 determined to have pre-existing hypothyroidism, 48 de-novo primary hypothyroidism and 12 de-novo hypophysitis. All groups displayed fluctuations in TFTs around weeks 6‐8 of treatment. In the pre-existing hypothyroidism group, the levothyroxine dose was higher at 54 weeks than at baseline with the difference showing a trend towards statistical significance (p=0.06). The observed mean levothyroxine dose was significantly lower than the mean calculated weight-based dose for all groups. This finding was most clinically significant for the de-novo hypophysitis group (mean difference: -58.3 mcg, p<0.0001). The mean 0.9 mcg/kg levothyroxine dose at week 54 for the de-novo hypophysitis group was statistically lower than the other groups (p=0.009).
ConclusionIt is reasonable to screen with TFTs every 4 weeks, and space out TFTs surveillance to every 12 weeks after week 20. Our findings suggest a more conservative approach for levothyroxine dosing in those developing de-novo hypothyroidism, especially hypophysitis, such as initiating at 0.9-1.2 mcg/kg.