Transcript 投影片 1
Graves’
hyperthyroidism and
anti-thyroid drugs
By 蔡文欽
Case
The patient is a 77 years female with history of
hypertension with regular treatment for many
years.
She suffered from poor appetite, body weight
loss, diarrhea, sweating, insomnia, palpitation,
weakness, anxiety and hand tremor difficult
swallow function for two months.
She went to our OPD and was admitted for
further evaluation and management .
PE
Conscious:clear
Skin: warm and moist
HEENT: no protrudent eye; fine air
Neck: no palpable mass
Heart: tachycardia; RHB.
Limbs: proximal weakness; edema(+);
tremor(+)
Treatment
PTU(50mg/tab) 2# BID
Propranolol 2# TID
Graves' disease
Patient with biochemically confirmed
thyrotoxicosis, diffuse goiter on palpation,
ophthalmopathy, positive TPO antibodies,
and often a personal or family history of
autoimmune disorders.
Introduction
Thionamides, a sulfhydryl group and a thiourea
moiety within a heterocyclic structure
Propylthiouracil (PTU, 6-propyl-2-thiouracil).
Methimazole (1-methyl-2-mercaptoimidazole); in
US, Asia and Europe.
Carbimazle (analogue of methimazole); in UK.
Inhibit TPO-mediated iodination
Introduction
Propylthiouracil block the conversion of
T4T3 within the thyroid and in peripheral
tissues
Immunosuppressive effects
TRAb,
intracellular adhesion molecule, IL-2
and IL-6 receptors.
clinical pharmacology
Rapid GI absorbtion.
No dosed adjustment in children, elderly, liver
disease or renal failure.
PTU
T1/2:
90mins
80-90% bound to albumin
Methimazole
T1/2:
6hrs
Free form
clinical use of drugs
Primary treatment for hyperthyroidism or as
preparative therapy before radiotherapy or
surgery.
Weighed against the risks and benefits of the
more definitive therapy, such as radioiodine and
surgery.
Ophthalmopathy,
pregnancy and most children and
adolescents.
Randomized trial comparing antithyroid drugs,
radioiodine, and surgery
patient satisfaction was more than 90 percent
for all three,
Lowest medical costs in ATD.
choice of drugs
oncedaily in methimazole; better adherence and
rapid improvement in T3 and T4 than PTU.
PTU (300 mg daily) $408 /year
Methimazole (15 mg daily, $360; or 30 mg daily,
$720).
Side-effect profiles of the two drugs
methimazole.
PTU is preferred during pregnancy.
practical considerations
methimazole vs PTU1:10;
underestimate
10mg85%;
40mg92% after six weeks
Follow-up every 4-6 weeks2-3 months
after 3-6 months; then 4-6 months
Remission
Less remission if more severe degrees of
hyperthyroidism, large goiters, high TRAb or a
high T3/T4 after course of drug treatment.
High relapse if depression, paranoia and
problem of daily life.
Poor clinical or biochemical predictor in 300
patients study.
TRAb(+) after treatmentrelapse; normal
relapse(30-50%).
Duration and dose vs relapse.
12 to 18 months is recommended.
Discontinuation of drug
treatment
Stopped or tapered after 12 to 18 ms
except children and adolescents.
Relapse after 3-6 ms; 50-60%.
Pregnancypostpartum relapse or
thyroiditis.
↑Failure rate of radioiodine in PTU.
Minor side effect
Dose-related in methimazole.
Cross-reactivity50%.
Arthragiaantithyroid arthritis syndrome.
Major side effect
Agranulocytosis(90 days; 0.35% vs 0.37%)
Autoimmune
process; ANCA. 1000-1500.
Fever and sore throat; stop drugs and G-CSF.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
Hepatotoxicity(0.1-0.2%)
Hepatocellular
injury in PTU and cholestatsis in
methimazole
Vasculitis (PTU>methimazole)
Lupus;
self-limited
Steroid or cyclophosphamide; H/D.
Use of antithyroid drugs during
pregnancy and lactation
Congenital anomalies, esp aplasia cutis while
methimazole (1/2000 births).
Methimazole embryopathy; 2/241 vs. 1/2500 to
1/10,000 (esophageal atresia and choanal
atresia). No increase in other studies.
Class D (risk of fetal hypothyroidism).
No risk in breast milk