Abstract

BackgroundIndividuals exhibit fluctuations in the concentration of serum thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) over time. The scale of these variations ranges from minutes to hours, and from months to years. The main factors contributing to the observed within-person fluctuations in serum TSH comprise pulsatile secretion, circadian rhythm, seasonality, and ageing. In clinical practice and clinical research however, such within-person biological variation in serum TSH concentrations is often not considered. The aim of this review is to present an overview of the main sources of within-person variation in TSH levels, as well as the potential underlying biological mechanisms, and the clinical implications.SummaryIn euthyroid individuals, the circadian rhythm, with a nocturnal surge around 02:00–04:00 h and a nadir during daytime has the greatest impact on variations in serum TSH concentrations. Another source of within-person variation in TSH levels is seasonality, with generally higher levels during the cold winter months. Since TSH is secreted in a pulsatile manner, TSH levels also fluctuate over minutes. Furthermore, elevated TSH levels have been observed with ageing. Other factors that affect TSH levels include thyroid peroxidase (TPO)-antibody positivity, BMI, obesity, smoking, critical illness, and many xenobiotics, including environmental pollutants and drugs. Potential underlying biological mechanisms of within-person variation in TSH levels can be safely concluded from the ability of TSH to respond quickly to changes in cues from the internal or external environment in order to maintain homeostasis. Such cues include the biological clock, environmental temperature, and length of day. The observed increase in TSH level with ageing can be explained at a population level and at an organism level. In clinical practice, the season for thyroid testing can influence a patient’s test result and it occurs frequently that subclinical hypothyroid patients normalize to euthyroid levels over time without intervention.ConclusionsSerum TSH concentrations vary over time within an individual, which is caused by multiple different internal and external factors. It is important to take the within-person variations in serum TSH concentrations into account when testing a patient in clinical practice, but also in performing clinical research.

Highlights

  • Hormones of the hypothalamus-pituitary-thyroid (HPT) axis are part of a feedforward and feedback system

  • These within-person variations in Thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) levels are mainly caused by pulsatile secretion, circadian rhythm, seasons, and ageing

  • If TSH is fluctuating around the upper reference range limit, these marginal changes could lead to diagnosis of subclinical hypothyroidism, especially in older adults

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Summary

Background

Individuals exhibit fluctuations in the concentration of serum thyroidstimulating hormone (TSH) over time. The main factors contributing to the observed withinperson fluctuations in serum TSH comprise pulsatile secretion, circadian rhythm, seasonality, and ageing. Summary: In euthyroid individuals, the circadian rhythm, with a nocturnal surge around 02:00–04:00 h and a nadir during daytime has the greatest impact on variations in serum TSH concentrations. Another source of within-person variation in TSH levels is seasonality, with generally higher levels during the cold winter months. Potential underlying biological mechanisms of within-person variation in TSH levels can be safely concluded from the ability of TSH to respond quickly to changes in cues from the internal or external environment in order to maintain homeostasis. Frontiers in Endocrinology | www.frontiersin.org van der Spoel et al

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