Abstract
Background: The use of vitamin supplements that include biotin during pregnancy can interfere with immunoassays based on the streptavidin/biotin system, causing falsely elevated or decreased results for various hormones, depending on the assay format.
Purpose: To present a clinical case in which biotin supplementation during pregnancy caused significant interference in TSH measurement, generating falsely elevated values.
Case presentation: A 29-year-old woman with a history of total thyroidectomy for papillary thyroid cancer had adequate suppression goals until she became pregnant. Despite multiple increases in levothyroxine dose, she did not achieve them. Given a levothyroxine dose greater than 2,50 µg/kg/day and the onset of clinical symptoms consistent with thyrotoxicosis, the possibility of analytical interference secondary to the use of prenatal multivitamins containing biotin in the immunoassay used for TSH quantification was raised. These supplements were discontinued 72 hours before the next follow-up, which demonstrated a significant decrease in levels.
Discussion and conclusion: Biotin interference in noncompetitive immunoassays often results in falsely low TSH levels; however, at very high concentrations—such as those resulting from megadoses of prenatal supplements—it can produce the opposite effect. Streptavidin saturation and the formation of unstable complexes alter the kinetics of the assay, generating an increased light signal and falsely elevated TSH values.
Biotin consumption can interfere with TSH measurement in immunoassays, generating falsely high or low results, leading to the administration of inappropriate and potentially harmful treatments for patients.
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