Abstract
Twenty-three patients submitted to thyroidectomy and before ablative therapy and with cervical uptake >10% were compared to 48 patients with uptake <2%. All but 3 patients with large remnants reached TSH levels >30 mIU/l after thyroxin withdrawal. Cervical pain requiring anti-inflammatory treatment after radioiodine was more frequent in patients with larger remnants (34.7% vs. 10.4%). Remnant ablation was successful in 56% of the individuals with uptake >10% and in 93.3% of those with uptake <2%. The sensitivity of diagnostic scanning for pulmonary metastases was similar (71.4% vs. 77.7%). The specificity of stimulated thyroglobulin at a cut-off of 5 ng/ml was 100% for patients with discrete remnants but only 37.5% for the others. We conclude that significant thyroid remnants (cervical uptake >10%) result in a lower efficacy of ablation, cause more local symptoms after radioiodine, and compromise the specificity of thyroglobulin measurements.
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