Arq Bras Endocrinol Metab 2004;48(3):379-383

Consequences of the persistence of large thyroid remnants after bilateral thyroidectomy for differentiated thyroid cancer

Pedro Weslley S. , Ludmilla David , Álvaro , Eduardo L. , Leonardo , Saulo

DOI: 10.1590/S0004-27302004000300008

Twenty-three patients submitted to thyroidectomy and before ablative therapy and with cervical uptake >10% were compared to 48 patients with uptake <2%. All but 3 patients with large remnants reached TSH levels >30mIU/l after thyroxin withdrawal. Cervical pain requiring anti-inflammatory treatment after radioiodine was more frequent in patients with larger remnants (34.7% vs. 10.4%). Remnant ablation was successful in 56% of the individuals with uptake >10% and in 93.3% of those with uptake <2%. The sensitivity of diagnostic scanning for pulmonary metastases was similar (71.4% vs. 77.7%). The specificity of stimulated thyroglobulin at a cut-off of 5ng/ml was 100% for patients with discrete remnants but only 37.5% for the others. We conclude that significant thyroid remnants (cervical uptake >10%) result in a lower efficacy of ablation, cause more local symptoms after radioiodine, and compromise the specificity of thyroglobulin measurements.

Consequences of the persistence of large thyroid remnants after bilateral thyroidectomy for differentiated thyroid cancer

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