Abstract Disclosure: L.G. Amato: None. P.H. Carani: None. L.D. Volpi: None. A. Rahal: None. E.M. Volpi: None. Introduction: Thyroid nodules are quite prevalent worldwide, with papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) being the most common histological subtype of thyroid malignant neoplasm, accounting for approximately 85% of thyroid cancers. When this carcinoma is less than 10 mm in its longest axis, it is defined as papillary thyroid microcarcinomas (mPTCs) which has had an increasing proportion of thyroid cancers and with a disease-specific survival of patients having this diagnosis more than 99% after 10 years of follow-up. Most guidelines concerning thyroid cancer care recommend a lobectomy as the first-line treatment strategy for low-risk unifocal mPTC but often results in aggressive overtreatment. Thyroid surgery comes with significant costs and morbidity rates caused by iatrogenic hypothyroidism and recurrent laryngeal nerve damage, resulting in poor quality of life, justifying the growing search for minimally invasive and effective methods in the treatment of mPTC and in this context Radiofrequency thermal ablation (RFA), a minimally invasive treatment that preserves thyroid function have been proposed for patients with low-risk mPTC. Clinical case: From April 2018 to January 2024, 143 patients with mPTC, were submitted to RFA and patient's follow-up were dated 1, 3, 6, 12 and 18 months after the procedure. During the follow-up we observed 3 (2%), complications, 1 case of permanent paralysis unilateral vocal cord, 1 Horner Syndromes and 1 case of transient paralysis, with total reversal. In all cases there was a reduction in the volume of the node after 6 months of the procedure. Conclusion: The reported incidence rate of postoperative hypothyroidism in patients underwent hemithyroidectomy is 10.9-48.8%, therefore, risks of complications with radioablation in our series were lower than those previously described during hemithyroidectomy. Radiofrequency thermal ablation (RFA) is a minimally invasive treatment that preserves thyroid function with a lower incidence of complications compared to thyroidectomy or lobectomy, and and should be considered the selection procedure for low-risk thyroid microcarcinomas. Presentation: 6/3/2024