# Infection-Associated Transient Neutropenia Mimicking Methimazole-Induced Agranulocytosis in Graves' Disease: A Diagnostic Dilemma

**Authors:** Saraswathi Saiprasad, Narayana Swamy, Theresa Cao, Sriharika Gottipolu

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.103363 · 2026-02-10

## TL;DR

A young woman with Graves' disease experienced severe neutropenia during methimazole treatment, which was initially mistaken for a drug-induced condition but was later found to be infection-related.

## Contribution

The case highlights diagnostic challenges in distinguishing drug-induced agranulocytosis from infection-associated neutropenia using clinical and laboratory features.

## Key findings

- The patient's neutrophil count rapidly improved after infection resolution, suggesting transient infection-related neutropenia.
- Methimazole was cautiously reintroduced at a reduced dose, resulting in sustained neutrophil normalization.
- The case emphasizes the importance of ANC trajectory and infectious context in diagnosing neutropenia.

## Abstract

Methimazole is the preferred antithyroid drug for Graves’ disease but is rarely associated with agranulocytosis, a potentially life-threatening adverse effect that traditionally mandates permanent drug discontinuation. Agranulocytosis is defined by an absolute neutrophil count (ANC) below 500 cells/µL. We report a case of severe neutropenia occurring during methimazole therapy in a young woman with Graves’ disease that closely mimicked methimazole-induced agranulocytosis but was ultimately consistent with infection-associated transient neutropenia. While receiving methimazole, the patient developed acute tonsillitis with a nadir ANC of 0.06 × 10³/µL, prompting immediate discontinuation of therapy. Rapid hematologic improvement was observed within approximately 24 hours, with continued recovery of neutrophil counts as the infection resolved. In contrast, thyroid indices worsened following methimazole withdrawal, necessitating a time-sensitive management decision. After objective evidence of hematologic recovery and careful reassessment of causality, methimazole was cautiously reintroduced at a reduced dose under predefined stopping rules and close laboratory monitoring, resulting in sustained neutrophil normalization and continued thyroid control. Reintroduction of antithyroid drug therapy is not standard practice in confirmed antithyroid drug-induced agranulocytosis, and both methimazole and propylthiouracil remain contraindicated in that setting. This case does not alter established recommendations but highlights practical clinical features, particularly ANC trajectory, timing of recovery, and infectious context, that may help distinguish classic drug-induced agranulocytosis from transient infection-related neutropenia and support highly individualized, patient-centered decision-making when ideal care pathways are constrained.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** methimazole (PubChem CID 1349907)
- **Diseases:** Graves' disease (MONDO:0005364), agranulocytosis (MONDO:0001609), tonsillitis (MONDO:0001039)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Neutropenia (MESH:D009503), Agranulocytosis (MESH:D000380), Infection (MESH:D007239), Graves' Disease (MESH:D006111), acute tonsillitis (MESH:D014069)
- **Chemicals:** Methimazole (MESH:D008713), propylthiouracil (MESH:D011441)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12981615/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12981615