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Smoking and thyroid.

Clinical endocrinology
August 1, 2013
Wilmar M Wiersinga
Journal ArticleReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to investigate the associations between smoking and thyroid function, including iodine-related effects, thyroid disorders, and cancer risk.

Results Summary

Smoking was linked to lower TSH levels, increased thyroid size in iodine-deficient areas, reduced thyroid cancer risk, and lower autoimmune hypothyroidism risk but higher Graves' hyperthyroidism and ophthalmopathy risk. The effects were dose-dependent and reversible after quitting smoking.

Population

General population, with specific focus on smokers and iodine-deficient regions.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

Thiocyanate (from smoking) competitively inhibits thyroidal iodide uptake.

Extracted Claims (17)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
Current smoking
decrease
serum TSH
population surveys
slight dose-dependent
associated with a slight dose-dependent fall
#1
Current smoking
increase
serum FT4 and FT3
-
-
rise
#2
smoking
increase
thyroid size
smokers in iodine-deficient areas
slightly
slightly greater
#3
smoking
increase
nontoxic goitre and thyroid multinodularity
smokers in iodine-deficient areas
-
increased prevalence
#4
Current smoking
decrease
thyroid cancer
-
dose dependently
reduces dose dependently the risk
#5
Current smoking
decrease
papillary thyroid cancer
-
more pronounced
more pronounced risk reduction
#6
Current smoking
decrease
follicular thyroid cancer
-
less pronounced
less pronounced risk reduction
#7
smoking
decrease
TSH
smokers
-
lower
#8
smoking
decrease
body mass index
smokers
-
lower
#9
Current smoking
decrease
developing thyroid peroxidase and thyroglobulin antibodies
-
dose dependent
lowers the risk
#10
Current smoking
decrease
subclinical and overt autoimmune hypothyroidism
-
dose dependent
lowers the risk
#11
smoking
no change
risk of autoimmune hypothyroidism
former smokers
within 3 years after quitting
disappearance of effect
#12
smoking
increase
Graves' hyperthyroidism
-
dose-dependent
dose-dependent risk factor
#13
smoking
increase
Graves' ophthalmopathy
-
dose-dependent
dose-dependent risk factor
#14
smoking
increase
Graves' hyperthyroidism
-
higher
higher recurrence rate
#15
smoking
increase
Graves' ophthalmopathy after 131I therapy
-
higher
higher risk
#16
smoking
decrease
GO treatment with steroids or retrobulbar irradiation
-
less favourable
less favourable outcome
#17
Abstract

Current smoking in population surveys is associated with a slight dose-dependent fall of serum TSH, likely secondary to a rise of serum FT4 and FT3 induced by activation of the sympathetic nervous system; it is independent of iodine intake. In contrast, the slightly greater thyroid size in smokers is observed in iodine-deficient but not in iodine-sufficient areas and caused by competitive inhibition of thyroidal iodide uptake by thiocyanate. Smokers have an increased prevalence of nontoxic goitre and thyroid multinodularity, at least in iodine-deficient areas. Current smoking reduces dose dependently the risk of thyroid cancer, which is more pronounced for papillary than for follicular types; the risk in former smokers approaches that of never smokers. The lower TSH and lower body mass index in smokers might contribute to this reduced risk. Current smoking lowers the risk of developing thyroid peroxidase and thyroglobulin antibodies and subclinical and overt autoimmune hypothyroidism; the effect is dose dependent, but disappears within 3 years after quitting smoking. There is evidence from an animal model of experimental autoimmune thyroiditis that anti-inflammatory effects of nicotine are involved. In contrast, smoking is a dose-dependent risk factor for Graves' hyperthyroidism and especially for Graves' ophthalmopathy. Smoking is related to a higher recurrence rate of Graves' hyperthyroidism, a higher risk on Graves' ophthalmopathy after 131I therapy and a less favourable outcome of GO treatment with steroids or retrobulbar irradiation. The observed associations with smoking likely indicate causal relationships in view of consistent associations across studies, the presence of dose-response effects and disappearance of associations after cessation of smoking.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AdultBody Mass IndexFemaleGoiterHashimoto DiseaseHumansHypothyroidismMaleOrgan SizeSmokingThyroid DiseasesThyroid GlandThyroid NeoplasmsThyroiditis, AutoimmuneThyrotropin
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy75/10
Quality85/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations256
Citations/Year21.3
Relative Citation Ratio10.23
NIH Percentile97.9%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.95
Weight Score1.89
Normalized Score0.67
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