Sign in →

Test Code THYRO Thyrotropin Receptor Antibody, Serum

Reporting Name

Thyrotropin Receptor Ab, S

Useful For

Recommended first-line test for detection of thyrotropin receptor antibodies

 

The following situations:

-Differential diagnosis of etiology of thyrotoxicosis in patients with ambiguous clinical findings and/or contraindicated (eg, pregnant or breast-feeding) or nondiagnostic thyroid radioisotope scans

-Diagnosing clinically suspected Graves disease (GD) (eg, extrathyroidal manifestation of GD include endocrine exophthalmos, pretibial myxedema, thyroid acropachy) in patients with normal thyroid function tests

-Determining the risk of neonatal thyrotoxicosis in a fetus of a pregnant female with active or past active GD

-Differential diagnosis of gestational thyrotoxicosis versus first trimester manifestation or recurrence of GD

-Assessing the risk of GD relapse after antithyroid drug treatment

Performing Laboratory

Mayo Clinic Laboratories in Rochester

Specimen Type

Serum


Specimen Required


Patient Preparation:

1. For 12 hours before specimen collection do not take multivitamins or dietary supplements containing biotin (vitamin B7), which is commonly found in hair, skin, and nail supplements and multivitamins.

2. Patient should not be receiving heparin treatment.

Collection Container/Tube:

Preferred:  Serum gel

Acceptable: Red top

Submission Container/Tube: Plastic vial

Specimen Volume: 1 mL

Collection Instructions: Centrifuge and aliquot serum into a plastic vial.


Specimen Minimum Volume

0.75 mL

Specimen Stability Information

Specimen Type Temperature Time Special Container
Serum Refrigerated (preferred) 7 days
  Frozen  90 days

Reference Values

≤1.75 IU/L

Day(s) Performed

Monday through Saturday

Test Classification

This test has been cleared, approved, or is exempt by the US Food and Drug Administration and is used per manufacturer's instructions. Performance characteristics were verified by Mayo Clinic in a manner consistent with CLIA requirements.

CPT Code Information

83520

Clinical Information

Autoimmune thyroid disease is characterized by the presence of autoantibodies against various thyroid components, namely the thyrotropin receptor, thyroid peroxidase, and thyroglobulin, as well as by an inflammatory cellular infiltrate of variable severity within the gland.

 

Among the autoantibodies found in autoimmune thyroid disease, thyrotropin receptor autoantibodies (TRAb) are most closely associated with disease pathogenesis. All forms of autoimmune thyrotoxicosis (Graves disease [GD], Hashitoxicosis, neonatal thyrotoxicosis) are caused by the production of stimulating TRAb-. These autoantibodies, also known as long-acting-thyroid-stimulators or thyroid-stimulating immunoglobulins (TSI), bind to the receptor and transactivate it, leading to stimulation of the thyroid gland independent of the normal feedback-regulated thyrotropin stimulation.

 

Some patients with GD also have TRAb that do not transactivate the thyrotropin receptor. The balance between stimulating and blocking antibodies, as well as their individual titers, is felt to be a determinant of GD severity. Some patients with autoimmune hypothyroidism also have evidence of either blocking TRAb or, rarely, TSI.

 

TRAb may be detected before autoimmune thyrotoxicosis becomes biochemically or clinically manifest. Since none of the treatments for GD are aimed at the underlying disease process but rather ablate thyroid tissue or block thyroid hormone synthesis, TSI may persist after apparent clinical cure. This is of particular relevance for pregnant women with a history of GD that was treated with thyroid-ablative therapy. Some of these women may continue to produce TSI. Since TSI are IgG antibodies, they can cross the placental barrier causing neonatal thyrotoxicosis.

 

While the gold standard for thyroid-stimulating immunoglobulins is the bioassay (see TSI / Thyroid-Stimulating Immunoglobulin, Serum), the TRAb test has a shorter turnaround time, less analytical variability, and is less expensive.

Report Available

1 to 3 days

Reject Due To

Gross hemolysis Reject
Gross lipemia OK
Gross icterus Reject

Method Name

Electrochemiluminescence Immunoassay

Forms

If not ordering electronically, complete, print, and send a General Request (T239) with the specimen.