Background: Guidelines for the follow-up of differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) recommend the measurement of TSH-stimulated thyroglobulin (s-Tg) instead of basal Tg on T4 therapy (b-Tg). However, these guidelines were established using first-generation Tg assays with a functional sensitivity (FS) of 0.5-1.0 ng/ml. Current more sensitive second-generation Tg assays (Tg2G; FS 0.05-0.10 ng/ml) have shown that low-risk DTC patients with undetectable b-Tg rarely have recurrences. Objectives: This study was undertaken to compare b-Tg using a chemiluminescent Tg2G assay (Tg2GICMA; FS 0.1 ng/ml) with s-Tg in DTC patients with an intermediate risk of recurrence. Methods: We evaluated 168 DTC patients with a low (n = 101) and intermediate (n = 67) risk of recurrence treated by total thyroidectomy (147 also treated with radioiodine), with a mean follow-up of 5 years. Results: b-Tg was undetectable with the Tg2GICMA in 142 of 168 patients. s-Tg was <2 ng/ml in 138 of these 142 patients, and only 3 of these 138 (2%) presented metastases on cervical ultrasound (US). Of the 4 of 142 patients with s-Tg >2 ng/ml, 1 had cervical metastases seen after radioiodine. Furthermore, 26 of 168 patients presented detectable b-Tg with the Tg2GICMA; 17 of these 26 patients also presented s-Tg >2 ng/ml. In 10 of these 17 patients, metastases were detected. Cervical US or b-Tg were positive in 14 of 15 patients with recurrent disease. Globally, the sensitivity and negative predictive value of the Tg2GICMA plus US were 93 and 99%, respectively. Conclusion: b-Tg measured with a Tg2GICMA and cervical US, used together, are equivalent to s-Tg in identifying metastases in patients with DTC with a low or intermediate risk of recurrence.
The addition of lithium to treatment with 30 mCi 131I in thyroidectomized patients with low-risk DTC improved the efficacy of thyroid RA and therefore might be a better alternative than using higher doses of 131I for remnant ablation in these patients.
there was concordance between initial clinical benign diagnosis, FNAB and the follow-up. In one case there was a papillary carcinoma. In addition, ultrasonography should be considered for all patients with suspected thyroid nodules. Finally, we demonstrated that a second cytology usually confirms the result of the first cytology in benign thyroid nodules.
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