Postpartum immune rebound may precipitate autoimmune thyroid disease. The sequential development of postpartum thyroiditis, Graves' disease, Hashimoto thyroiditis, and papillary thyroid carcinoma in a single patient has not previously been described. A 30-year-old woman (G3P1204) presented five months after a preterm dichorionic–diamniotic twin delivery (at 32 weeks 2 days) with thyrotoxicosis and weight loss. Laboratory evaluation showed suppressed thyroid stimulating hormone, positive thyrotropin receptor antibodies, and elevated thyroid peroxidase antibodies. Radioiodine uptake was low, consistent with postpartum thyroiditis. She subsequently developed thyroid eye disease and persistent autoimmune seropositivity. Progressive thyroid nodules prompted total thyroidectomy, which incidentally revealed papillary thyroid carcinoma (<1 cm) on a background of chronic lymphocytic thyroiditis and treated Graves' disease. This case highlights the diagnostic and management challenges of overlapping postpartum autoimmune thyroid disorders and underscores the importance of surveillance when structural thyroid abnormalities coexist. • The report presents a case in which postpartum immune rebound triggered evolving autoimmune thyroid disease. • The patient sequentially developed postpartum thyroiditis, Graves' disease, and Hashimoto thyroiditis. • Active thyroid eye disease influenced definitive surgical management. • A papillary thyroid microcarcinoma was incidentally identified at thyroidectomy. • The case supports surveillance of postpartum thyroid dysfunction.
Capito et al. (Sun,) studied this question.