Best Practice & Research Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
Volume 23, Issue 6 , Pages 693-702, December 2009

Immune reconstitution syndrome and the thyroid

School of Medicine, Beech Hill Road, Sheffield, S10 2RX, UK

Reconstitution Graves' disease occurs in three settings. First, bone marrow transplantation from a donor with Graves' disease may cause this disease to appear in the recipient, as a result of adoptive immunity, although disordered immunoregulation secondary to graft-versus-host disease may also play a role. Second, alemtuzumab treatment for multiple sclerosis leads to the development of Graves' disease in up to a third of patients during the phase of naive T-cell expansion, which follows therapeutic lymphocyte depletion. Other reconstitution autoimmune phenomena, including immune thrombocytopaenic purpura, are also recognised after alemtuzumab administration. Finally, reconstitution Graves' disease may occur during a similar phase of CD4+ T-cell expansion, which follows highly active antiretroviral therapy for human immunodeficiency virus infection. Again, this complication is part of a broader spectrum of immunoregulatory disturbances, which can arise after immune reconstitution. The mechanisms responsible for reconstitution Graves' disease are at present unclear, but may include a relative bias towards a Th2-mediated immune response and reduced competition for autoreactive lymphocytes to expand during the time when recovery from lymphopenia commences.

Keywords: Graves' disease, bone marrow transplantation, alemtuzumab, highly active antiretroviral therapy, adoptive immunity, immune reconstitution

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PII: S1521-690X(09)00079-7

doi:10.1016/j.beem.2009.07.003

Best Practice & Research Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
Volume 23, Issue 6 , Pages 693-702, December 2009