The results of remnant ablation were satisfactory with all activities applied. Although after the first application of I-131 the activity of 100 mCi is significantly more effective in thyroid ablation than the administration of 30-50 mCi and 75 mCi, the ablation rates between all the three groups are similar (almost equal) after the second application. Thus, the activity to be administered may depend on patients' characteristics and a detailed consideration of the merits and demerits of each I-131 activity.
Family history plays a significant role in the development of thyroid cancer, and having first-degree relatives with not only medullary, but also papillary thyroid cancer strongly predicts the risk of developing the malignant thyroid disease. In contrast, benign thyroid disorders in family history do not lead to the development of thyroid cancer.
SUMMARY
The worldwide incidence of differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) has increased in recent decades, likely due to frequent use of cervical ultrasonography (US) and US-guided fine needle aspiration biopsy (FNA)., US is performed during follow-up after thyroidectomy, and US-guided FNA with cytology is used if suspicious cervical lymph nodes (LN) or thyroid bed masses are detected. Knowing that serum anti-Tg antibodies (sTgAb) affect the use of serum Tg (sTg) as a tumor marker, the aim of our study was to assess the usefulness of Tg determination in needle aspirates (FNA-Tg) in presence of sTgAb. This retrospective study included 149 patients with DTC and 159 aspirations of suspicious LN and thyroid bed masses. As expected, there was a negative correlation between sTg and sTgAb levels (p<0.05), while FNA-Tg levels had a positive correlation with FNA-TgAb levels (p<0.05). Furthermore, we found a positive correlation between sTg and FNA-Tg levels (p<0.05), but not between sTgAb and FNA-TgAb or sTgAb and FNA-Tg. In conclusion, these results show that FNA-Tg values were not affected by sTgAb and that FNA-Tg measurement were highly effective in detecting cervical DTC metastases. However, combined use with cytology is suggested for neck evaluation because cytology could reveal metastases from other tumor sites.
SUMMARYThe Bethesda System for Reporting Thyroid Cytopathology from 2009 introduced a new category in thyroid nodule fine-needle aspiration (FNA) findings named atypia of undetermined significance (AUS), which usually appears in around 5% of FNA findings. Our study aimed to assess the utility of AUS finding in determining the risk of malignancy in thyroid nodules. In our study, 160 patients with AUS finding on initial FNA were regularly followed-up. Total and specific malignancy rates were calculated after receiving histopathologic confirmation or histopathologic/cytologic exclusion of malignancy. Eventually 80 (50%) patients were referred to surgery, with malignancy rate of 37.5% on histopathology. Another 52 (32.5%) patients were confirmed to have benign nodules on repeat FNA. After combining results obtained from histopathologic reports with those obtained from cytologic follow-up, total malignancy rate was 22.72%. However, malignancy was confirmed in only one (5.26%) of 19 patients with AUS finding on repeat FNA with surgical and histopathologic follow-up. In conclusion, FNA is an extremely useful tool for clinicians to discriminate patients to be referred to surgery and those that can be followed-up safely without the need for further invasive procedures.
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