Affiliation:
1. Departments of Surgery, Medicine, and Biochemistry, Loyola University Stritch School of Medicine, Maywood
Abstract
Abstract
In a consecutive series of 234 patients with differentiated thyroid carcinoma of follicular cell origin (Hurthle cell tumors excluded), a radioactive iodine (131I) scan was obtained 3 to 6 months after thyroidectomy and 4 weeks after cessation of thyroid hormone treatments, only if extrathyroidal tumor extension or nodal or distant metastases were present. Twenty-one patients (9%) with 131I uptake of 3% or more (group 1) were treated with 150 to 200 mCi of 131I. Forty-four patients (19%) with less than 3% uptake (group 2) and 169 patients (72%) without evidence of metastases or extrathyroidal spread (group 3) were treated only with thyroid hormone. All patients initially underwent total thyroidectomy and modified neck dissection if cervical lymph node metastases were present. Three patients in group 1 and one patient in group 2 had recurrent tumor with a mean follow-up of 8.9 and 8.4 years. There were no recurrences in group 3 with a mean follow-up of 7.2 years. Death rate from thyroid carcinoma was 5% in group 1 (one patient) and 0% in groups 2 and 3. In conclusion, 1311 scanning and therapy may be omitted in patients with differentiated thyroid carcinoma in the absence of local tumor extension or regional or distant metastases. Therapy with 131I is not demonstrated to be of benefit in this population of patients. (Surgery 1989; 106:956-9.)
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Cited by
1 articles.
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