Literature DB >> 12463429

High rate of recurrence after lobectomy for solitary thyroid nodule.

Maunzio Marchesi1, Marco Biffoni, Cristiana Faloci, Fausto Biancari, Francesco P Campana.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the long-term outcome of patients treated by lobectomy for solitary thyroid nodule.
DESIGN: Retrospective study.
SETTING: University hospital. PATIENTS: 83 patients admitted with a clinical diagnosis of solitary thyroid nodule.
INTERVENTIONS: Preoperative ultrasonography showed a solitary nodule in 32 patients and this finding was confirmed intraoperatively in 24 cases (77%). 59 patients with multinodular goitres were treated by total thyroidectomy and 24 with solitary nodule by lobectomy. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Postoperative complications and freedom from nodule recurrence and/or parenchymal irregularity.
RESULTS: One patient after lobectomy and 3 after total thyroidectomy developed temporary recurrent laryngeal nerve injury. Postoperative temporary hypoparathyroidism occurred in 13 patients (22%) after total thyroidectomy and in no patient after lobectomy (p = 0.02). Neither permanent recurrent laryngeal nerve injury nor permanent hypoparathyroidism occurred after either procedure. Among patients who underwent lobectomy, 6 had an adenoma and 18 had a nodular hyperplasia. At 4-year follow-up, the freedom rate from any thyroid nodule recurrence or parenchymal irregularity was 44.7%, and the freedom rate from nodular recurrence was 74%. Men tended to have a 4-year freedom rate from nodular relapse poorer than women (48% vs. 87%. p = 0.07). Nodular recurrence occurred in one patient operated on for an adenoma, and all the other recurrences occurred in patients with nodular hyperplasia.
CONCLUSIONS: The mid-term freedom rate from thyroid nodule recurrence or parenchymal irregularity after lobectomy for solitary nodule of the thyroid is unsatisfactory. This observation calls for a better evaluation of long-term results after lobectomy for this condition and identification of risk factors predictive of recurrence. This would enable a more appropriate preoperative selection of patients undergoing lobectomy, indicating total thyroidectomy for those patients with solitary nodule at high risk of recurrence.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 12463429     DOI: 10.1080/110241502320789078

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Surg        ISSN: 1102-4151


  9 in total

1.  Surgery for recurrent goiter: complication rate and role of the thyroid-stimulating hormone-suppressive therapy after the first operation.

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2.  The prevalence of post-thyroidectomy chronic asthenia: a prospective cohort study.

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3.  Five-year follow-up of a randomized clinical trial of unilateral thyroid lobectomy with or without postoperative levothyroxine treatment.

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Review 4.  Treatment and prevention of recurrence of multinodular goiter: an evidence-based review of the literature.

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6.  Long-term sequelae of the less than total thyroidectomy procedures for benign thyroid nodular disease.

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7.  Hypothyroidism, new nodule formation and increase in nodule size in patients who have undergone hemithyroidectomy.

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8.  Rheumatoid nodules in the thyroid bed following total thyroidectomy: a case report.

Authors:  Amit Bhargava; Poornima Upendra Hegde; Sameera Tallapureddy; Sarah Varghese; Faripour A Forouhar; Beatriz E Tendler
Journal:  J Med Case Rep       Date:  2013-10-29

9.  Total versus hemithyroidectomy for small unilateral papillary thyroid carcinoma.

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  9 in total

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