It has been suggested, on a theoretical basis, that ultrasound screening of thyroid nodules in obese patients with additional risk factors (family history, chronic autoimmune thyroiditis or high thyrotropin) might be cost-effective for the early detection and treatment of thyroid cancer. The present study evaluates if this approach can be validated in a real clinical setting.Methods: Patients with obesity who attended hospital-based clinics were evaluated for risk factors of thyroid cancer and ultrasound screened for thyroid nodularity.Detected nodules were evaluated according to current guidelines.Results: A total of 429 patients were evaluated (70.2% women, mean age 49.1 ± 11.0, mean body mass index 42.6 ± 5.8 kg/m 2 ). Risk factors were present in 129 (30.1%) patients. Thyroid nodules with indication for fine-needle aspiration biopsy were detected in 69 (16.1%). We did not find differences in the risk of harbouring thyroid nodules according to the presence of risk factors (no risk factors 16.6%, risk factors 14.1%, P = .64). No single risk factor conferred an increased risk for thyroid nodules During the screening procedure, four cases of thyroid cancer were detected, none of them with the evaluated risk factors.
Conclusion:The presence of known risk factors for thyroid cancer does not improve the performance of a US screening strategy aimed at the detection of thyroid nodules in obese patients. According to current guidelines, screening for thyroid nodules in obese patients is not recommended regardless of the presence of thyroid cancer risk factors.
What's known• Obesity increases the risk of thyroid cancer • Hypothyroidism and chronic autoimmune thyroiditis are presumed to be risk factors for thyroid cancer • It is unknown whether a thyroid nodule/cancer screening strategy in obese patients could be
Purpose: It has been suggested, on a theoretical basis, that ultrasound
screening of thyroid nodules in obese patients with additional risk
factors (family history, thyroiditis or high thyrotropin) might be
cost-effective for the early detection and treatment of thyroid cancer.
The present study evaluates if this approach can be validated in a real
clinical setting. Methods: Patients with obesity attended in
hospital-based clinics were evaluated for risk factors of thyroid cancer
and ultrasound screened for thyroid nodularity. Detected nodules were
evaluated according to current guidelines. Results: A total of 429
patients were evaluated (70.2% women, mean age 49.1±11.0, mean body
mass index 42.6±5.8 kg/m2). Risk factors were present in 129 (30.1%)
patients. Thyroid nodules with indication for fine needle aspiration
biopsy were detected in 69 (16.1%). We did not find differences in the
risk of harbouring thyroid nodules according to the presence of risk
factors (no risk factors 16.6%, risk factors 14.1%, p = 0.64). No
single risk factor conferred an increased risk for thyroid nodules
During the screening procedure 4 cases of thyroid cancer were detected,
none of them with the evaluated risk factors. Conclusion: The present
study, has been unable to demonstrate that the use of known risk factors
for thyroid cancer is helpful to discriminate obese patients with higher
risk of harbouring thyroid nodules.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.