| Literature DB >> 26668060 |
Livia Lamartina1, Teresa Montesano1, Fabiana Trulli1, Marco Attard2, Massimo Torlontano3, Rocco Bruno4, Domenico Meringolo5, Fabio Monzani6, Salvatore Tumino7, Giuseppe Ronga1, Marianna Maranghi1, Marco Biffoni1, Sebastiano Filetti8, Cosimo Durante1.
Abstract
Papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) patients treated with thyroidectomy and radioiodine remnant ablation (RRA) often have detectable TSH-stimulated thyroglobulin (Tg) levels without localizable disease after primary treatment. To assess the value of repeat stimulated Tg assays in these patients' follow-up, we retrospectively analyzed 86 cases followed in 5 Italian thyroid-cancer referral centers. We enrolled 86 patients with PTCs treated with total/near-total thyroidectomy plus RRA between January 1,1990 and January 31, 2006. In all cases, the initial postoperative visit revealed stimulated serum Tg ≥1 ng/mL, negative Tg antibodies, and no structural evidence of disease. None received empiric radioiodine therapy. Follow-up (median: 9.6 years) included neck ultrasound and basal Tg assays (yearly) and at least 1 repeat stimulated Tg assay. Of the 86 patients analyzed (initial risk: low 63 %, intermediate 35 %, high 2 %), one (1 %) had ultrasound-detected lymph node disease and persistently elevated stimulated Tg levels at 3 years. In 17 (20 %), imaging findings were consistently negative, but the final stimulated Tg levels was still >1 ng/mL (median 2.07 ng/mL, range 1.02-4.7). The other 68 (80 %) appeared disease-free (persistently negative imaging findings with stimulated Tg levels ≤1 ng/mL). Mean intervals between first and final stimulated Tg assays were similar (5.2 and 4.8 years) in subgroups with versus without Tg normalization. Reclassification as disease-free was significantly more common when initial stimulated Tg levels were indeterminate (<10 ng/mL). In unselected PTC cohorts with incomplete/indeterminate biochemical responses to thyroidectomy and RRA, periodic remeasurement of stimulated Tg allows most patients to be classified as disease-free.Entities:
Keywords: Biochemical incomplete response; Follow-up; Indeterminate response; Papillary thyroid cancer; Recurrences; Thyroglobulin
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26668060 DOI: 10.1007/s12020-015-0823-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Endocrine ISSN: 1355-008X Impact factor: 3.633