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1.
Environ Int ; 187: 108717, 2024 May 06.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38728818

BACKGROUND: Exposure to environmental pollutants is suspected to be one of the potential causes accounting for the increase in thyroid cancer (TC) incidence worldwide. Among the ubiquitous pollutants, per-polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs), were demonstrated to exert thyroid disrupting effects. Perfluoroalkyl carboxylates (PFCAs) represent a subgroup of PFAS and include perfluoro carboxylic acids (PFOA and PFHxA) and perfluoropolyether carboxylic acid (C6O4). The potential relationship between exposure to PFCAs and TC was not yet fully elucidated. This in vitro study investigated whether certain PFCAs (C6O4, PFOA, and PFHxA) can influence the composition of TC microenvironment. METHODS: Two models of normal thyroid cells in primary cultures: Adherent (A-NHT) and Spheroids (S-NHT) were employed. A-NHT and S-NHT were exposed to C6O4, PFOA or PFHxA (0; 0.01; 0.1, 1; 10; 100; 1000 ng/mL) to assess viability (WST-1 and AV/PI assay), evaluate spherification index (SI) and volume specifically in S-NHT. CXCL8 and CCL2 (mRNA and protein), and EMT-related genes were assessed in both models after exposure to PFCAs. RESULTS: PFHxA reduced the viability of both A-NHT and S-NHT. None of the PFCAs interfered with the volume or spherification process in S-NHT. CXCL8 and CCL2 mRNA and protein levels were differently up-regulated by each PFCAs, being PFOA and PFHxA the stronger inducers. Moreover, among the tested PFCAs, PFHxA induced a more consistent increase in the mRNA levels of EMT-related genes. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first evaluation of the effects of exposure to PFCAs on factors potentially involved in establishing the TC microenvironment. PFHxA modulated the TC microenvironment at three levels: cell viability, pro-tumorigenic chemokines, and EMT-genes. The results provide further evidence of the pro-tumorigenic effect of PFOA. On the other hand, a marginal effect was observed for C6O4 on pro-tumorigenic chemokines.

3.
Eur J Intern Med ; 2024 Mar 27.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38548514

BACKGROUND: The relationship between subclinical hypothyroidism (SHYPO) and sleep disturbances is still poorly investigated. This systematic review aims to critically appraise the existing literature to provide more insights in understanding whether SHYPO favors sleep disturbances or it is the sleep disturbance per se that affects the hypothalamus-pituitary-thyroid axis regulation. METHODS: Original studies on sleep quality and duration in patients with SHYPO were searched in the PubMed/MEDLINE, Embase, Web of Science and Scopus databases. Two reviewers independently screened articles for inclusion, extracted data, and assessed the quality of included studies. RESULTS: Eight studies, including 2916 patients with SHYPO and 18,574 healthy controls, were retrieved. An overall agreement (7 out of 8 studies), about a positive correlation between decreased sleep quality and/or duration and SHYPO was observed. Five studies investigated sleep quality through self-reported surveys; only two studies explored both subjective and objective assessment of sleep quality with actigraphy (n = 1) or polysomnography (n = 1); finally, one study assessed subjective evaluation of sleep quality through a single question regarding the number of sleeping hours. A high level of heterogeneity among studies was manifest due to differences in population source, sleep measure assessment and criteria for diagnosing SHYPO. DISCUSSION: Overall, the existing literature data suggest a link between SHYPO and sleep disturbances, but further studies on larger populations of patients with homogeneous study designs and outcomes are warranted.

4.
Eur Thyroid J ; 13(2)2024 Apr 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38417259

Objective: Obesity is associated with increased thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) in non-pregnant subjects, but this phenomenon has not been fully characterized during pregnancy. Our aim was to evaluate the impact of BMI on first-trimester TSH in a wide cohort of pregnant women with negative anti-thyroperoxidase antibodies (AbTPO) and its implications on uterine artery pulsatility index (UtA-PI), a marker of early placentation. Methods: The study included 2268 AbTPO-negative pregnant women at their first antenatal visit. Anamnestic data, BMI, TSH, anti-nuclear antibody (ANA) and extractable nuclear antigen (ENA) positivity and mean UtA-PI were collected. Results: A total of 1693 women had normal weight, 435 were overweight and 140 were obese. Maternal age, ANA/ENA positivity, history of autoimmune diseases and familiar history of thyroid diseases were similar in the three groups. TSH was significantly higher in obese women (1.8 (IQR: 1.4-2.4) mU/L) when compared to normal weight (1.6 (IQR: 1.2-2.2) mU/L) and overweight (median: 1.6 (IQR: 1.2-2.2) mU/L) ones (P < 0.001). BMI was significantly related with the risk of having a TSH level ≥4 mU/L at logistic regression, independently from non-thyroid autoimmunity, smoking or familiar predisposition for thyroid diseases (OR: 1.125, 95% CI: 1.080-1.172, P < 0.001). A restricted cubic splines regression showed a non-linear relationship between BMI and TSH. Women with a TSH ≥4 mU/L had a higher UtA-PI, independently from BMI. Conclusion: Overweight/obesity is significantly related with TSH serum levels in AbTPO-negative pregnant women, independently from the other risk factors for hypothyroidism during pregnancy. The increase of TSH levels could be clinically relevant, as suggested by its association with abnormal UtA-PI, a surrogate marker of abnormal placentation.


Obesity, Maternal , Thyroid Diseases , Thyrotropin , Female , Humans , Pregnancy , Autoimmune Diseases , Obesity/epidemiology , Overweight/epidemiology , Pregnancy Trimester, First
5.
Eur J Endocrinol ; 190(2): 165-172, 2024 Feb 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38298148

OBJECTIVE: To compare the American Thyroid Association (ATA) risk staging of histologically proven papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) in patients who received a presurgery cytologic result of either indeterminate thyroid nodules (ITNs, Bethesda III/IV) or suspicious for malignancy/malignant (TIR 4/5, Bethesda V/VI). METHODS: Clinical, ultrasonographic, cytological data from patients with histologically diagnosed PTC were retrospectively collected. RESULTS: Patients were stratified according to the preoperative fine-needle aspiration cytology into 2 groups: 51 ITNs (TIR3A/3B) and 118 suspicious/malignant (TIR 4/5). Male/female ratio, age, and presurgery TSH level were similar between the 2 groups. At ultrasound, TIR 4/5 nodules were significantly more frequently hypoechoic (P = .037), with irregular margins (P = .041), and with microcalcifications (P = .020) and were more frequently classified as high-risk according to the European Thyroid Imaging and Reporting Data System (EU-TIRADS; P = .021). At histology, the follicular PTC subtype was significantly more prevalent among ITNs while classical PTC subtype was more frequent in TIR 4/5 group (P = .002). In TIR 4/5 group, a higher rate of focal vascular invasion (P < .001) and neck lymph node metastasis (P = .028) was observed. Intermediate-risk category according to ATA was significantly more frequent in TIR 4/5 group while low-risk category was more frequently found among ITNs (P = .021), with a higher number of patients receiving radioiodine in TIR 4/5 group (P = .002). At multivariate logistic regression, having a TIR 4/5 cytology was associated with a significant risk of having a higher ATA risk classification as compared to ITN (OR 4.6 [95% CI 1.523-14.007], P = .007), independently from presurgery findings (nodule size at ultrasound, sex, age, and EU-TIRADS score). CONCLUSIONS: Papillary thyroid cancers recorded among ITNs are likely less aggressive and are generally assessed as at lower risk according to ATA classification.


Thyroid Neoplasms , Thyroid Nodule , Humans , Female , Male , United States , Thyroid Cancer, Papillary/surgery , Thyroid Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Thyroid Neoplasms/epidemiology , Thyroid Neoplasms/surgery , Retrospective Studies , Iodine Radioisotopes , Thyroid Nodule/pathology , Ultrasonography/methods
6.
Biomed Pharmacother ; 170: 115974, 2024 Jan.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38056240

PURPOSE: Canagliflozin exert anti-cancer effects in several types of cancer including thyroid cancer (TC). However, whether it could modulate chemokines secreted in TC microenvironment is still unknown. The aim of the present study is to evaluate whether Canagliflozin could inhibit pro-tumorigenic chemokines CXCL8 and CCL2 and/or the TC cell migration induced by them. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: TC cell lines, TPC-1 and 8505C, HUVEC and normal thyroid cells NHT were treated with increasing concentrations of Canagliflozin. Viability was assessed by WST-1 and colony formation/proliferation by cristal violet. Chemokines were measured in cell supernatants by ELISA. mRNAs were evaluated by RT-PCR. TC migration (trans-well) and HUVEC proliferation (cristal violet) were assessed by treating cells with Canagliflozin alone or in combination with CXCL8 or CCL2. RESULTS: Canagliflozin reduced TC, HUVEC and NHT cells viability. The ability to form colonies of TC and the HUVEC proliferation (basal and CXCL8 or CCL2-induced) was also inhibited. mRNA and the secretion of CXCL8 was reduced in all cell types. The secretion of CCL2 was reduced by Canagliflozin in all cell types whereas its mRNA levels were reduced only in TPC-1. IL-6 was reduced in all cell types, while CXCL10 increased. More interestingly the CXCL8 and CCL2-induced TC cell migration as well as HUVEC proliferation was inhibited by Canagliflozin in both cell types. CONCLUSION: Canagliflozin exerts anti-cancer effects not only by reducing TC viability or colonies formation, but also by modulating two pro-tumorigenic chemokines resulting in reduced TC cells migration. These results expand the spectrum of canagliflozin-promoted anti-cancer effects.


Canagliflozin , Thyroid Neoplasms , Humans , Canagliflozin/pharmacology , Cell Line, Tumor , Thyroid Neoplasms/genetics , Interleukin-8/metabolism , Chemokines , Cell Movement , RNA, Messenger , Chemokine CCL2/genetics , Chemokine CCL2/metabolism , Tumor Microenvironment
7.
Front Pharmacol ; 14: 1303844, 2023.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38146457

Cancer represents the main cause of death worldwide. Thyroid cancer (TC) shows an overall good rate of survival, however there is a percentage of patients that do not respond or are refractory to common therapies. Thus new therapeutics strategies are required. In the past decade, drug repositioning become very important in the field of cancer therapy. This approach shows several advantages including the saving of: i) time, ii) costs, iii) de novo studies regarding the safety (just characterized) of a drug. Regarding TC, few studies considered the potential repositioning of drugs. On the other hand, certain anti-diabetic drugs, were the focus of interesting studies on TC therapy, in view of the fact that they exhibited potential anti-tumor effects. Among these anti-diabetic compounds, not all were judjed as appropriate for repositioning, in view of well documented side effects. However, just to give few examples biguanides, DPP-4-inhibitors and Thiazolidinediones were found to exert strong anti-cancer effects in TC. Indeed, their effects spaced from induction of citotoxicity and inhibition of metastatic spread, to induction of de-differentiation of TC cells and modulation of TC microenvironment. Thus, the multifacial anti-cancer effect of these compounds would make the basis also for combinatory strategies. The present review is aimed at discuss data from studies regarding the anti-cancer effects of several anti-diabetic drugs recently showed in TC in view of their potential repositioning. Specific examples of anti-diabetic repositionable drugs for TC treatment will also be provided.

8.
Nutrients ; 15(18)2023 Sep 12.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37764737

Autoimmune thyroid diseases are on the rise worldwide, and such a rapid increase is mainly driven by environmental factors related to changed lifestyles in "modern" societies. In this context, diet seems to play a crucial role. An unhealthy high-energy diet, rich in animal fat and proteins, salt and refined sugars (the so-called "Western diet") negatively influences the risk of autoimmunity by altering the immune balance and the gut microbiota composition, enhancing oxidative stress and promoting inflammation. In contrast, the Mediterranean diet represents a unique model of healthy eating, characterized by a high intake of food from vegetable sources, a low consumption of saturated fats in favor of unsaturated fats (mainly, olive oil), a moderate consumption of fish (typically, the small oily fishes) and dairy products, as well as a moderate consumption of wine at meals, and a low intake of meat. Thanks to its nutritional components, the Mediterranean Diet positively influences immune system function, gut microbiota composition, and redox homeostasis, exerting anti-oxidants, anti-inflammatory, and immunomodulatory effects. The present review was aimed at exploring the existing knowledge on the correlations between dietary habits and thyroid autoimmunity, to evaluate the role of the Mediterranean diet as a protective model.

9.
Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ; 14: 1192561, 2023.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37522115

Introduction: Patients with severe COVID-19 often experience long-lasting disabilities that can improve after pulmonary rehabilitation. Moreover patients with severe COVID-19 display thyroid function alterations due to a non-thyroidal illness syndrome (NTIS). The aim of our study was to evaluate thyroid function parameters among patients hospitalized for COVID-19 who were eligible or not to respiratory rehabilitation and their modifications during follow-up. Materials and methods: Post-COVID-19 patients referred to a Respiratory Rehabilitation Unit were evaluated. Outpatients, not candidate for rehabilitation, were enrolled as Control group. Patients who had completed a 4-week-rehabilitation program were enrolled as Rehabilitation Group. All patients were evaluated at T0 (4 weeks after the discharge home in Control Group and after completion of rehabilitation in Rehabilitation Group) and at T1 (3 months after T0). Results: The final study group included 39 patients (20 in the Rehabilitation group and 19 in the Control group). Patients in the Rehabilitation Group had more frequently received invasive or non-invasive ventilation, had a longer length-of-stay in referring hospitals, had a higher number of comorbidities and displayed a worse performance at 6-minute-walking-test (6MWT) and Short-Physical-Performance-Battery-test (SPPB). FT3 values were lower at T0 in the Rehabilitation Group, while TSH and FT4 values were similar in the two groups. While no significant modifications in thyroid-function-parameters were observed in the Control Group, a significant increase in FT3 value was observed in the Rehabilitation Group at T1. Participants of both groups had improved the results of 6MWT at T1, while SPPB values improved only in the Rehabilitation Group. Conclusions: COVID-19 patients after pulmonary rehabilitation experience an increase in FT3 values during follow-up, paralleled with an amelioration of functional capabilities.


COVID-19 , Thyroxine , Humans , Triiodothyronine , Thyroid Hormones , Respiration, Artificial
10.
Endocrine ; 81(2): 246-251, 2023 08.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37074559

PURPOSE: It is widely accepted that patients experience weight gain after total thyroidectomy, and preventive measures should be recommended. METHODS: A prospective study was designed to assess the efficacy of a dietetic intervention to prevent post-thyroidectomy weight gain in patients undergoing surgery for both benign and malignant thyroid conditions. Patients undergoing total thyroidectomy were prospectively and randomly assigned to receive a personalized pre-surgery diet counseling (GROUP A) or no intervention (GROUP B), according to a 1:2 ratio. All patients underwent follow-up with body-weight measurement, thyroid function evaluation and lifestyle and eating habits assessment at baseline (T0), 45 days (T1) and 12 months (T2) post-surgery. RESULTS: The final study group encompassed 30 patients in Group A and 58 patients in Group B. The two groups were similar in terms of age, sex, pre-surgery BMI, thyroid function and underlying thyroid condition. The evaluation of body weight variations showed that patients in Group A did not experience significant body weight changes at either T1 (p = 0.127) nor T2 (p = 0.890). At difference, patients in Group B underwent a significant body weight increase from T0 to both T1 (p = 0.009) and T2 (p = 0.009). TSH levels were similar in the two groups, both at T1 and T2. Lifestyle and eating habits questionnaires failed to register any significant difference between the two groups, apart from an increase in sweetened beverages consumption in Group B. CONCLUSIONS: A dietician counseling is effective in preventing the post-thyroidectomy weight gain. Further studies in larger series of patients with a longer follow-up appear worthwhile.


Nutritionists , Thyroid Diseases , Humans , Body Weight , Counseling , Prospective Studies , Thyroidectomy/adverse effects , Thyroidectomy/methods , Weight Gain , Male , Female
11.
J Clin Med ; 12(8)2023 Apr 18.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37109270

BACKGROUND: A raised serum TSH in the absence of a clear etiology, or "unexplained hyperthyrotropinemia" (UH), can be challenging for clinicians. The aim of the present study was to evaluate potential strategies aimed at a clinical and biochemical characterization of UH patients. METHODS: We compared 36 patients with UH with a control group of 14 patients with chronic autoimmune thyroiditis (CAT) and subclinical hypothyroidism. The two groups were compared in terms of the following: (i) the rate of normalization of TSH after repeating with another assay; (ii) the rate of normalization of TSH over time with the same assay; (iii) the reduction in TSH after precipitation with polyethilenglycole (PEG); and (iv) free thyroxine (FT4) levels. RESULTS: Similar TSH levels were observed in UH [5.65 (5.21-6.37)] and CAT [5.62 (5.17-8.50)] (p = 0.489). TSH measurement with another assay method showed a normal TSH value in 41.9% of UH vs. 46.1% of CAT patients (p = 0.797). After repeating the TSH measurement in time with the same assay method, an increased TSH value was confirmed in all cases, in both groups (0% in the UH group vs. 0% in the CAT group, p = 1.000). TSH recovery after PEG precipitation was similar in the two groups (% precipitable post-PEG: 68.75 ± 3.14 in UH vs. 68.67 ± 7.18 in CAT, p = 0.960). FT4 levels were similar in the two groups (FT4 1.02 ± 0.20 ng/dl in UH vs. 1.00 ± 0.20 ng/dl in CAT, p = 0.789). CONCLUSIONS: The results do not support the concept that laboratory interferences are more frequent in UH patients, suggesting that patients with UH should be managed in the same way as patients with CAT until proven otherwise.

12.
Environ Sci Pollut Res Int ; 30(23): 63522-63534, 2023 May.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37052835

Industrial chemical PFAS are persistent pollutants. Long chain PFAS were taken out of production due to their risk for human health, however, new congeners PFAS have been introduced. The in vitro effects of the long-chain PFOA, the short-chain PFHxA and the new-generation C6O4 were evaluated in normal and in thyroid cancer cell lines in terms of cell viability and proliferation, and secretion of a pro-tumorigenic chemokine (CXCL8), both at the mRNA and at the protein level. The Nthy-ory 3-1 normal-thyroid cell line, the TPC-1 and the 8505C (RET/PTC rearranged and BRAFV600e mutated, respectively) thyroid-cancer cell lines were exposed to increasing concentrations of each PFAS in a time-course. We evaluated viability using WST-1 (confirmed by AnnexinV/PI) and proliferation using the cristal-violet test. To evaluate CXCL8 mRNA we used RT-PCR and measured CXCL8 in the supernatants by ELISA. The exposure to none PFAS did not affect thyroid cells viability (except for a reduction of 8505C cells viability after 144 h) or proliferation. Individual PFAS differently modulated CXCL8 mRNA and protein level. PFOA increased CXCL8 both at mRNA and protein level in the three cell lines; PFHxA increased CXCL8 mRNA in the three cell lines, but increased the protein only in TPC-1 cells; C6O4 increased the CXCL8 mRNA only in thyroid cancer cell lines, but never increased the CXCL8 protein. The results of the present study indicate that the in vitro exposure to different PFAS may modulate both at the mRNA and secreted protein levels of CXCL8 in normal and cancer thyroid cells. Strikingly different effects emerged according to the specific cell type and to the targeted analyte (CXCL8 mRNA or protein).


Fluorocarbons , Thyroid Neoplasms , Humans , Cell Line, Tumor , Cell Survival , Fluorocarbons/pharmacology , Interleukin-8
13.
Rev Endocr Metab Disord ; 24(2): 241-250, 2023 04.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36227457

Iodine supplementation during pregnancy in areas with mild-moderate deficiency is still a matter of debate. The present study aimed at systematically reviewing currently available evidences provided by meta-analyses with the aim to further clarify controversial aspects regarding the need of iodine supplementation in pregnancy as well as to provide guidance on clinical decision-making, even in areas with mild-moderate deficiency. Medline, Embase and Cochrane search from 1969 to 2022 were performed. For the purpose of this review, only studies containing meta-analytic data were selected. A total of 7 meta-analyses were retrieved. Four meta-analyses evaluated the relationship between iodine status during pregnancy and neonatal and maternal outcomes suggesting the existence of a U-shaped correlation between iodine status and several maternal and neonatal consequences, especially if iodine status is evaluated at the beginning of pregnancy. Three meta-analyses evaluating the results of intervention trials failed to provide straightforward conclusions on the benefits of iodine supplementation in pregnant women in areas with mild-moderate iodine deficiency. Although evidence coming from meta-analyses suggests a role of iodine status during pregnancy in determining maternal and child outcomes, results of meta-analyses of intervention trials are still controversial. Several factors including, degree of iodine deficiency, and pooling studies conducted in areas with different iodine intake, may account for the lack of benefits reported by meta-analyses of intervention trials. More high-quality, randomized, controlled trials including information on timing, dose and regimen of iodine supplementation are needed to further elucidate this issue.


Iodine , Malnutrition , Pregnancy Complications , Infant, Newborn , Child , Pregnancy , Humans , Female , Iodine/therapeutic use , Dietary Supplements , Pregnancy Complications/drug therapy
14.
Environ Pollut ; 317: 120801, 2023 Jan 15.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36462676

Glyphosate is a pesticide, which contaminates the environment and exposes workers and general population to its residues present in foods and waters. In soil, Glyphosate is degraded in metabolites, amino-methyl-phosphonic acid (AMPA) being the main one. Glyphosate is considered a potential cancerogenic and endocrine-disruptor agent, however its adverse effects on the thyroid were evaluated only in animal models and in vitro data are still lacking. Aim of this study was to investigate whether exposure to Glyphosate could exert adverse effects on thyroid cells in vitro. Two models (adherent-2D and spheroid-3D) derived from the same cell strain Fisher-rat-thyroid-cell line-5 (FRTL-5) were employed. After exposure to Glyphosate at increasing concentrations (0.0, 0.1-0.25- 0.5-1.0-2.0-10.0 mM) we evaluated cell viability by WST-1 (adherent and spheroids), results being confirmed by propidium-iodide staining (only for spheroids). Proliferation of adherent cells was assessed by crystal violet and trypan-blue assays, the increasing volume of spheroids was taken as a measure of proliferation. We also evaluated the ability of cells to form spheroids after Glyphosate exposure. We assessed changes of reactive-oxygen-species (ROS) by the cell-permeant H2DCFDA. Glyphosate-induced changes of mRNAs encoding for thyroid-related genes (TSHR, TPO, TG, NIS, TTF-1 and PAX8) were evaluated by RT-PCR. Glyphosate reduced cell viability and proliferation in both models, even if at different concentrations. Glyphosate at the highest concentration reduced the ability of FRTL-5 to form spheroids. An increased ROS production was found in both models after exposure to Glyphosate. Finally, Glyphosate increased the mRNA levels of some thyroid related genes (TSHR, TPO, TG and TTF-1) in both models, while it increased the mRNAs of PAX8 and NIS only in the adherent model. The present study supports an adverse effect of Glyphosate on cultured thyroid cells. Glyphosate reduced cell viability and proliferation and increased ROS production in thyroid cells.


Paired Box Transcription Factors , Thyroid Gland , Rats , Animals , Humans , Paired Box Transcription Factors/genetics , Paired Box Transcription Factors/metabolism , Paired Box Transcription Factors/pharmacology , Reactive Oxygen Species/metabolism , Nuclear Proteins/genetics , Nuclear Proteins/metabolism , Nuclear Proteins/pharmacology , PAX8 Transcription Factor/metabolism , RNA, Messenger/metabolism , Glyphosate
15.
Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ; 13: 1001728, 2022.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36187133

Our institution (University Hospital "L. Vanvitelli" - Naples, Italy) is a high-volume (HV) center in Naples metropolitan area and many patients are referred there to repeat thyroid fine-needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) after initial FNAC performed in low-volume institutions (LV). The aims of the study were to 1) examine the inter-observer agreement between HV and LV institutions according to the Italian thyroid cytology system, and 2) explore how the discordant FNAC reports were distributed in the European Thyroid Imaging and Reporting Data System (EU-TIRADS) categories. All consecutive cases of repeat FNAC performed at University Hospital "L. Vanvitelli" from January 2016 to December 2021 were retrospectively reviewed. Fleiss' kappa (κ) was used to assess the inter-observer agreement, and categorical variables were compared by chi-square testing. P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant. A total of 124 nodules from 124 adults (mean age 49 years; mean maximum diameter 19 mm) were evaluated. Initial FNAC reports at LV were: 4 (3.2%) TIR1c, 64 (51.6%) TIR2, 48 (38.7%) TIR3A, 8 (6.5%) TIR3B, 0 TIR4, 0 TIR5. The overall FNAC reports were significantly different between the LV and HV institutions. At repeated FNAC, cytological diagnosis was unchanged in 64 (51.6%) cases including TIR2 and TIR3A results. A downgraded FNAC diagnosis (i.e., TIR2 vs TIR3A, TIR2 vs TIR3B) was observed in 36 (29%) nodules. An upgraded FNAC diagnosis (i.e., TIR3B vs TIR2, TIR3B vs TIR3A, TIR4 vs TIR3A, TIR5 vs TIR2, TIR5 vs TIR3B) was recorded in 24 (19.4%) nodules. The weighted inter-observer agreement between LV and HV institutions was poor (κ=0.133). Changed FNAC results were significantly (p=0.0023) more frequent in nodules at intermediate/high-risk (i.e., EU-TIRADS 4/5) than in those at no/low risk (EU-TIRADS 2/3) [i.e., 32/48 (66.7%) and 28/76 (36.8%), respectively]. Downgraded FNAC results were significantly more frequent in EU-TIRADS 2/3 (p=0.001) while upgraded FNAC were present only in EU-TIRADS 4/5 (24/24, 100.0%). The inter-observer agreement among LV and HV thyroid services was poor. The EU-TIRADS 4 and 5 categories included all the malignant nodules with FNAC results reclassified as higher risk (i.e., TIR3B-TIR4-TIR5) by the high-volume cytology service.


Thyroid Nodule , Adult , Biopsy, Fine-Needle/methods , Humans , Middle Aged , Observer Variation , Retrospective Studies , Thyroid Nodule/pathology
16.
Gynecol Endocrinol ; 38(8): 697-701, 2022 Aug.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35723545

BackgroundGraves' disease occurrence during pregnancy is not a frequent event, showing an incidence of 0.2-0.4% in unselected pregnant women. Depending on their functional properties, TSH-receptor antibodies can induce hypothyroidism or hyperthyroidism. Recognizing the signs of altered thyroid function is essential to prevent possible complications on the fetus.Materials and methodsThe case of a pregnant woman without previous history of thyroid disease presenting with severe overt hypothyroidism during the first trimester is reported. Levothyroxine therapy was started and 6 weeks later overt hyperthyroidism was observed. TRAb were detected at high titers. Levothyroxine was withdrawn and low dose methimazole was started. Serial obstetric ultrasound scans were negative for indirect signs of fetal thyroid dysfunctions and no fetal goiter was visualized throughout pregnancy. Spontaneous delivery occurred without complications at 39 weeks of gestation. In the post-partum, severe overt hypothyroidism recurred, thus methimazole was discontinued and levothyroxine was restarted. TRAb persisted at high levels. The infant experienced a transient thyrotoxicosis, which fully resolved in three months with normalization of thyroid function and negativization of TRAb levels.ResultsThe present case report allows us to overview the challenges related to the management of hypo and hyperthyroidism in patients with high TRAb levels, requiring strict monitoring aimed at early detection of both maternal and fetal consequences.ConclusionsThis case underlines the importance of close follow-up and the need of collaboration in a multidisciplinary team when Graves's disease is diagnosed in a pregnant woman to prevent adverse neonatal outcomes.


Graves Disease , Hyperthyroidism , Hypothyroidism , Pregnancy Complications , Thyroid Diseases , Female , Graves Disease/complications , Graves Disease/diagnosis , Graves Disease/drug therapy , Humans , Hypothyroidism/complications , Hypothyroidism/diagnosis , Hypothyroidism/drug therapy , Infant, Newborn , Methimazole/therapeutic use , Pregnancy , Pregnancy Complications/diagnosis , Pregnancy Complications/drug therapy , Pregnant Women , Thyroid Diseases/diagnosis , Thyroxine/therapeutic use
17.
Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ; 13: 876397, 2022.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35498406

Background: Vitamin D3 is largely involved in the regulation of calcium homeostasis. More recently, it was demonstrated that vitamin D exerts several beneficial effects against cancer progression through several mechanisms, including the reduction of cancer cells proliferation and migration. CXCL8 and CCL2 are two chemokines secreted by thyroid tumor cells. In the thyroid tumor microenvironment, these chemokines exert several pro-tumorigenic effects including the one to increase the metastatic potential. The aim of the present study was to investigate if vitamin D could modulate both thyroid cancer cell migration and their ability to secrete CCL2 and CXCL8. Methods: TPC-1 (RET/PTC rearranged) and 8505C (BRAFV600e mutated) thyroid cancer cell lines were treated with increasing concentrations of 1,25-OH-vitamin D3 (0-1,000 nM). Cell viability was assessed by WST-1 assay, cell migration was evaluated by transwell-migration chamber system, and CCL2 and CXCL8 levels were measured in the cell culture supernatants by ELISA. Results: Vitamin D did not affect cell viability but reduced, in a dose-dependent and significant manner, thyroid cancer cell migration (ANOVAs p < 0.05 for both TPC-1 and 8505C). Vitamin D differently modulated the secretion of CCL2 and CXCL8, by significantly inhibiting the secretion of CCL2 in both thyroid cancer cell lines and inhibiting the secretion of CXCL8 only in TPC-1 (ANOVAs p < 0.05). Conclusions: Vitamin D treatment of thyroid cancer cell lines reduces cell migration independently from the inhibition of the secretion of pro-tumorigenic chemokines. Future studies specifically designed at clarifying the pathways involved in the different inhibitory effects of vitamin D on CCL2 and CXCL8 in thyroid cancer cells appear worthwhile.


Thyroid Neoplasms , Vitamin D , Carcinogenesis , Cell Movement , Chemokine CCL2 , Cholecalciferol , Humans , Interleukin-8 , Thyroid Neoplasms/drug therapy , Tumor Microenvironment , Vitamin D/pharmacology , Vitamins/pharmacology
18.
Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ; 12: 707726, 2021.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34659109

Subacute thyroiditis (SAT) is a thyroid disease of viral or post-viral origin. Whether SAT represents a complication of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is still unclear. Our aim was to systematically review the literature to 1) explore the size of the literature about SAT in COVID-19 and 2) evaluate the clinical characteristics of SAT. PubMed/MEDLINE, Embase, and Scopus were searched until April 20, 2021. Original papers, case reports, and case series reporting SAT in COVID-19 patients were included. Authors and their country, journal, year of publication, COVID-19 and SAT clinical presentation, thyroid function, therapy, and follow-up data were extracted. Nineteen papers (17 case reports and 2 case series) were included, describing 27 patients, 74.1% females, aged 18 to 69 years. COVID-19 was diagnosed by nasopharyngeal swab in 66.7% cases and required hospitalization in 11.1%. In 83.3% cases, SAT occurred after COVID-19. Neck pain was present in 92.6% cases and fever in 74.1%. Median TSH, fT3, and fT4 were 0.01 mU/l, 10.79 pmol/l, and 27.2 pmol/l, respectively. C-reactive-protein and erythrocyte sedimentation rate were elevated in 96% of cases. Typical ultrasonographic characteristics of SAT were observed in 83.3% of cases. Steroids were the most frequent SAT therapy. Complete remission of SAT was recorded in most cases. In conclusion, the size and quality of published data of SAT in COVID-19 patients are poor, with only case reports and case series being available. SAT clinical presentation in COVID-19 patients seems to be similar to what is generally expected.


COVID-19/complications , Thyroiditis, Subacute/etiology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Evidence-Based Medicine , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Young Adult
19.
Endocrine ; 74(3): 638-645, 2021 12.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34224085

INTRODUCTION: Angiotensin-converting-enzyme-2 (ACE-2) was demonstrated to be the receptor for cellular entry of SARS-CoV-2. ACE-2 mRNA was identified in several human tissues and recently also in thyroid cells in vitro. PURPOSE: Aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of pro-inflammatory cytokines on the ACE-2 mRNA levels in human thyroid cells in primary cultures. METHODS: Primary thyroid cell cultures were treated with IFN-γ and TNF-α alone or in combination for 24 h. ACE-2 mRNA levels were measured by RT-PCR. As a control, the levels of IFN-γ inducible chemokine (CXCL10) were measured in the respective cell culture supernatants. RESULTS: The mean levels of ACE-2 mRNA increased after treatment with IFN-γ and TNF-α in all the thyroid cell preparations, while the combination treatment did not consistently synergically increase ACE-2-mRNA. At difference, CXCL10 was consistently increased by IFN-γ and synergically further increased by the combination treatment with IFN-γ + TNF-α, with respect to IFN-γ alone. CONCLUSIONS: The results of the present study show that IFN-γ and, to a lesser extent TNF-α consistently increase ACE-2 mRNA levels in NHT primary cultures. More interestingly, the combined stimulation (proven to be effective according to the synergic effect registered for CXCL10) produces different responses in terms of ACE-2 mRNA modulation. These results would suggest that elevated levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines could facilitate the entering of the virus in cells by further increasing ACE-2 expression and/or account for the different degree of severity of SARS-COV-2 infection. This hypothesis deserves to be confirmed by further specific studies.


COVID-19 , Thyroid Gland , Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme 2 , Cytokines , Humans , Pilot Projects , RNA, Messenger , SARS-CoV-2 , Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha
20.
Eur J Endocrinol ; 185(2): 201-208, 2021 Jun 28.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34048364

OBJECTIVE: Indeterminate cytological result at fine-needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) remains a clinical challenge for endocrinologists. Aim of the present study was to evaluate whether a coexistent chronic autoimmune thyroiditis (CAT) might affect the diagnostic accuracy of fine-needle aspiration cytology for thyroid nodules. DESIGN AND METHODS: A retrospective cohort study was designed including all nodules receiving an indeterminate cytology result (TIR3A or TIR3B) undergoing thyroid surgery and subsequent histological confirmation. Patients were stratified into two groups according to the presence or absence of CAT. The hypothesis to be tested was whether follicular cell alterations induced by CAT might increase the rate of indeterminate cytological results in histologically benign thyroid nodules. Additional control groups were represented by nodules with determinate cytology, either benign (TIR 2) or malignant (TIR5). RESULTS: One hundred and eighty-nine indeterminate thyroid nodules were included (67 TIR3A and 122 TIR3B). At post-surgical histology, 46 nodules (24.3%) were malignant. No significant differences were observed in the rate of histologically proven malignancy between patients without CAT and patients with CAT in the TIR3B (29.4% vs 32.4%; P = 0.843) nor TIR3A (13.0% vs 11.4%; P = 1.000) nodules. The rate of coexistent CAT was similar between TIR3B and TIR5 nodules harboring PTC at histology (30.4% vs 39.4%, P = 0.491) and between indeterminate nodules and a control group of TIR2 nodules (39.2% vs 37.0%; P = 0.720). CONCLUSIONS: The similar rates of histologically proven malignancy found in cytologically indeterminate nodules in the presence or absence of concomitant CAT would not support that CAT itself affects the diagnostic accuracy of fine-needle aspiration cytology.


Thyroid Nodule/diagnosis , Thyroiditis, Autoimmune/complications , Adult , Aged , Biopsy, Fine-Needle , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Retrospective Studies , Thyroid Gland/pathology , Thyroid Nodule/complications , Thyroid Nodule/pathology , Thyroiditis, Autoimmune/pathology
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