Author:
Jeong Jee Hyun,Lee Dong Cheol
Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the effects of intravenous steroid therapy on the clinical activity score (CAS), exophthalmos, margin-reflex distance 1 (MRD1), and autoantibody levels in patients with thyroid eye disease.Methods: In this retrospective observational study, we enrolled 83 patients diagnosed with thyroid eye disease treated with intravenous steroid therapy. We assessed exophthalmos, MRD1, CAS, thyroid-stimulating antibody (TSAb), and thyroid-stimulating hormone receptor antibody (TSHR Ab) levels at baseline, 6 and 12 weeks after initiating therapy, and 2 months after therapy termination. Additionally, baseline serum selenium levels were examined to determine their impact on treatment efficacy.Results: TSAb, TSHRAb, and CAS levels showed a continuous decline from 443.22 to 341.03 specimen-to-reference control ratio (SRR%), 22.18 to 7.91 IU/L, and 3.37 to 1.88, respectively (<i>p</i> < 0.0001), up to 2 months following therapy termination. Exophthalmos did not show significant changes at any assessed time point up to 2 months after therapy termination. MRD1 decreased until 12 weeks after therapy initiation but showed no significant change 2 months later. No correlation was found between baseline serum selenium levels and changes in exophthalmos, MRD1, TSAb, TSHR Ab, or CAS.Conclusions: Intravenous steroid therapy was effective in reducing TSAb, TSHR Ab, and CAS levels up to 2 months after therapy termination. However, it had limited positive impact on exophthalmos or eyelid retraction. Baseline selenium levels did not correlate with the changes in any of the examined parameters.
Publisher
Korean Ophthalmological Society