Diagnostic Thyroid Testing: Serum Thyroglobulin

  • Thyroglobulin (Tg):
    • Is a large glycoprotein that is stored as colloid:
      • The primary storage form of thyroid hormone, in the lumen of thyroid follicles
    • It is continuously secreted into circulation from the thyroid gland:
      • Thereby reflecting the mass of normal and malignant thyroid tissue
  • Higher serum concentrations result from:
    • TSH stimulation and / or injury of thyroid tissue:
      • However, for the individual with an intact thyroid gland:
        • Its clinical value for evaluating thyroid dysfunction or goiter is limited in the era of modern serum thyroid function testing and imaging
        • However, the demonstration of a suppressed serum Tg level in such a patient can be useful in differentiating factitious thyrotoxicosis (from exogenous thyroid hormone ingestion) from excessive endogenous thyroid hormone release of any etiology:
          • In this situation, when thyrotoxicosis is due to ingestion of exogenous thyroid hormone:
            • Normal thyroid hormone production is suppressed and serum Tg levels are decreased
          • In contrast, if excess thyroid hormone is produced from the thyroid:
            • Serum Tg levels are elevated
  • In current clinical practice:
    • The primary use of serum Tg concentrations is as a tumor marker in patients with differentiated thyroid cancer:
      • That is obtained to detect persistent and / or recurrent disease after a total thyroidectomy and radioactive iodine (131I) ablation
  • Most Tg assays have only first-generation functional sensitivity between 0.5 and 1 ng/mL:
    • But the second generation Tg assays are rapidly becoming the standard and have an improved functional sensitivity of 0.05 to 0.1 ng/mL
  • The Tg assay can be made more sensitive to detect persistent or recurrent tumor:
    • After stimulation by TSH:
      • Either endogenously by withholding thyroxine treatment in an athyreotic patient or with administration of recombinant human TSH (rhTSH):
        • The latter of which results in an approximate tenfold increase in basal serum Tg concentrations
  • Detection of persistent and / or recurrent disease in thyroid cancer depends on the performance of Tg immunometric assays:
    • Which currently have suboptimal sensitivity and high interassay variability
  • Virtually all immunometric methods:
    • Will report an undetectable Tg level in euthyroid Tg Ab positive controls:
      • Approximately 25% of patients with differentiated thyroid cancer have a positive serum TgAb titer:
        • Thus when a suspicious lymph node or neck mass is detected in an individual who has undergone a total thyroidectomy:
          • An unmeasurable basal or rhTSH-stimulated Tg in the setting of a positive serum TgAb level:
            • Does not necessarily exclude thyroid cancer recurrence
        • It is reasonable in this relatively uncommon situation to measure Tg instead by Tg Ab-resistant radioimmunoassay (RIA) or liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry:
          • Which are available at some specialty endocrine laboratories.
  • When the serum Tg Ab titer is positive:
    • It may also be used as a surrogate marker of tumor persistence / recurrence
  • In one study, a > 50% decrease of Tg Ab levels within the first year after a total thyroidectomy:
    • Was associated with the absence of tumor recurrence / persistence in all patients studied
    • Tumor recurrence / persistence was present in 37% of patients who had any rise of serum Tg Ab within the same period
  • Thus thyroid cancer patients with rising Tg antibody levels:
    • Are at high risk for disease persistence / recurrence and should be evaluated promptly
    • In addition, the sensitivities and absolute values reported by different methods of measuring Tg and TgAb are highly variable:
      • It is essential to always use the same Tg and TgAb method when following an individual over time for tumor persistence/recurrence
  • Finally, the presence of interfering heterophile antibodies (antibodies against the animal-derived antibodies used in the immunometric assay):
    • May rarely result in abnormally high or low serum Tg levels
    • The most common interfering antibodies are HAMAs:
      • Clinically, this should be suspected when an elevated serum Tg level is inappropriate for the clinical situation and does not increase with rhTSH stimulation
      • When heterophile antibody is suspected, the clinician should repeat the test using a commercially available heterophile-blocking tube (HBT) or measure Tg with an RIA assay