# A meta-analysis: elucidating diagnostic thresholds of peak systolic flow velocities in thyroid arteries for the discrimination of Graves’ disease and destructive thyrotoxicosis

**Authors:** Sinong Li, Zheng Ding, Xiang Li, Miao Fu, Li Sang, Mingxia Yang, Rubo Tang, Tianxiang Gu, Liang Sang

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2024.1393126 · 2024-06-07

## TL;DR

This study finds that peak systolic flow velocities in thyroid arteries can help distinguish between two thyroid disorders, with specific velocity thresholds improving diagnostic accuracy.

## Contribution

The study establishes specific peak systolic velocity thresholds for diagnosing Graves’ disease with high diagnostic efficacy.

## Key findings

- A peak systolic velocity above 68.63 cm/s in thyroid arteries significantly improves the diagnosis of Graves’ disease with up to 91% efficacy.
- No significant differences were found between superior and inferior thyroid arteries in distinguishing Graves’ disease from destructive thyrotoxicosis.
- The meta-analysis identified cut-off values of 20.33 cm/s for inferior thyroid artery and 25.61 cm/s for superior thyroid artery in normal subjects.

## Abstract

This meta-analysis examines peak systolic velocities (PSVs) in thyroid arteries as potential biomarkers for thyroid disorders, which includes treated and untreated Graves’ disease(GD) and destructive thyrotoxicosis(DT).

A search across databases including PubMed, Google Scholar, Embase, and Web of Science identified studies assessing peak systolic flow velocity in the inferior thyroid artery (ITA-PSV) and superior thyroid artery (STA-PSV) diagnostic efficacy in GD and DT.And the search was restricted to publications in the English language.The analysis compared STA-PSV and ITA-PSV across patient groups, evaluating intra-group variances and synthesizing sensitivity and specificity data.

The analysis covered 18 studies with 1276 GD, 564 DT patients, and 544 controls. The difference of STA-PSV between GD group, DT group and normal group and the difference of ITA-PSV were analyzed in subgroups, and there was no statistical significance between subgroups when comparing any two groups. Normal subjects displayed intra-group ITA-PSV and STA-PSV differences with established cut-off values of 20.33 cm/s (95% CI, 17.48-23.18) for ITA-PSV and 25.61 cm/s (95% CI, 20.37-30.85) for STA-PSV. However, no significant intra-group differences were observed in the STA-PSV and ITA-PSV cut-off values among groups with GD or DT. The combined cut-off values for these patient groups and normal subjects were 68.63 cm/s (95% CI, 59.12-78.13), 32.08 cm/s (95% CI, 25.90-38.27), and 23.18 cm/s (95% CI, 20.09-26.28), respectively. The diagnostic odds ratio(DOR) for these values was 35.86 (95% CI, 18.21-70.60), and the area under the summary receiver operating characteristic (SROC) curve was 0.91, with a sensitivity estimate of 0.842 (95% CI, 0.772-0.866).

PSVs in thyroid arteries are useful diagnostic tools in distinguishing DT from GD. A PSV above 68.63 cm/s significantly improves GD diagnosis with up to 91% efficacy. No notable differences were found between superior and inferior thyroid arteries in these conditions.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Graves’ disease (MONDO:0005364)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Graves' disease (MESH:D006111), thyroid disorders (MESH:D013959), thyrotoxicosis (MESH:C566386), GD (MESH:D005776)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11190173/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11190173