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Clinical Investigations |
1 Unità di Endocrinologia, Scientific Institute "Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza," San Giovanni Rotondo, Italy
2 Centro di Riferimento Oncologico Regionale della Basilicata, Rionero in Vulture, Italy
3 Servizio di Medicina Nucleare, Scientific Institute "Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza," San Giovanni Rotondo, Italy
4 Istituto di Clinica Medica Università di Foggia, Foggia, Italy
5 Dipartimento di Scienze Cliniche, Università di Roma "La Sapienza," Rome, Italy
| ABSTRACT |
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Key Words: toxic thyroid nodules radioiodine treatment alcohol ablation interventional procedures
| INTRODUCTION |
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The choice of an appropriate treatment for TTNs is not easy because unequivocal criteria for therapy selection have not yet been established (13), on account of the lack of long-term prospective randomized studies comparing different treatment modalities. However, a surgical approach for patients with TTNs larger than 35 cm is generally suggested (14). In fact, the higher the RAI dose requested to ablate TTNs, the greater is the concern about radiation exposure to the surrounding normal thyroid tissue (5). In contrast, on the basis of a reduced effectiveness of PEI for TTNs greater than 30 mL (approximately 4 cm in diameter), most authors do not recommend its use for large nodules (1,69).
We previously published a retrospective study evaluating long-term outcome in 43 patients with TTNs (34 cm in diameter) treated with either RAI or PEI and suggesting both treatments to be applicable and useful (10). On the basis of this previous work (10), our group has further and more deeply investigated the issue of nonsurgical treatment of large TTNs.
In this prospective study, we had the opportunity of evaluating a set of patients with TTNs larger than 4 cm, who either were at high surgical risk or refused surgery. They were randomly assigned to 2 different nonsurgical treatment modalities: The first subgroup was treated with RAI alone, whereas in the second subgroup RAI administration was preceded by a limited number of PEI sessions to reduce nodular volume (NV).
The goals of the study were to compare the 2 treatment modalities in terms of clinical, hormonal, scintigraphic, and ultrasonographic outcome and to assess the impact of both on local symptomatology.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Methods
Group A (RAI Treatment).
Ultrasonography was performed with a real-time scanner (Toshiba, Tosbee, Japan), using a 7.5-MHz transducer and a specific water-bag pad to allow measurements up to 8 cm. NV was calculated at ultrasonography by the ellipsoid formula using a previously validated algorithm (11).
Evaluation of local symptoms because of pressure in the neck, dysphagia, or aesthetic complaints was performed, attributing to each symptom a previously validated arbitrary score (0 = absent; 1 = moderate; 2 = severe) and then calculating the sum of single scores (symptom score, or SYS) (12).
FT4 (normal range, 924.5 pmol/L), FT3 (normal range, 2.96.5 pmol/L), and TSH (normal range, 0.24 mU/L) were measured with commercial kits (Elecsys; Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany). Antithyroglobulin and antithyroperoxidase autoantibodies were measured with commercial kits (Immulite; Euro-DPC, Gwynedd, U.K.).
In accord with other authors (2,5,13), we administered RAI at a fixed dose of 12,580 kBq (340 µCi)/mL NV, corrected for 100% of 24-h radioiodine uptake (RAIU).
RAIU was calculated using a previously described method (14). A capsule containing 1.85 MBq of RAI was measured in an acrylic neck phantom by a probe (distance, 30 cm) and was promptly administered to the fasting patient. Room background activity was also measured. Neck and thigh (for circulating activity) uptake was measured at 2, 6, and 24 h after the administration; the probe, positioned at 30 cm, recorded the activity for 1 min. Neck counts, after background and circulating activity subtraction and physical decay correction, were divided for capsule activity and gave the percentage uptake in the thyroid.
Group B (PEI + RAI Treatment).
Ultrasonographic picture, local symptoms, and hormonal status were evaluated as for group A patients. The total ethanol volume to be injected by PEI was calculated in 30% of NV to be subdivided into 24 different injections. PEI was accomplished under sonographic guidance by one of us as previously described (1012); sterile 95% ethanol (Salf, Bergamo, Italy) was injected by a free disposable syringe through a 20-gauge needle at weekly intervals divided into 4- to 8-mL doses. The cystic portion of the nodule, when visible, was preliminarily aspirated by a 18-gauge needle fitted to a 20-mL disposable syringe, and then ethanol was injected into the cystic portion and the surrounding solid portion through the same needle. The effect of PEI was optimized through repositioning of the needle when permeation of the ethanol into the nodule was inhomogeneous.
Ultrasonography with NV reevaluation, RAIU, and RAI administration were performed 2 mo after the last PEI session.
In both groups, 7.5 mg of methimazole per day were administered for 2 mo after the first evaluation, with the administration stopped 15 d before RAIU evaluation and subsequent RAI administration. TSH values at the time of RAI administration were still suppressed in all patients.
Antithyroid drugs were not used after RAI administration. According to clinical conditions, 2040 mg of propranolol were used 3 times a day for 12 mo after RAI dosing. In selected patients, when the use of ß-blockers was contraindicated, 80 mg of verapamil were administered 3 times a day during the same period.
Follow-up modalities were identical in the 2 groups. At 6 and 12 mo after RAI administration, we performed a clinical evaluation, calculated SYS, and determined serum FT3, FT4, and TSH levels and NV using ultrasonography. A new scintigraphic picture was obtained for all patients 6 mo after treatment.
Data are expressed as mean ± SD, with range in parentheses; an unpaired Student t test was used to compare mean values.
| RESULTS |
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In both subgroups, treatment was well tolerated; in 15 of 37 sessions, PEI induced a mild, self-limiting pain, radiating to the neck or jaw.
In subgroup A at the 12th month, 10 of 11 patients were clinically euthyroid: 2 had suppressed TSH values and another 2 showed a slight increase of TSH (4.2 and 8.8 mU/L). Finally, in a 69-y-old man treated with 2,035 MBq of RAI for a large (103 mL) TTN, clinically overt hypothyroidism developed, requiring L-thyroxin therapy.
In subgroup B at the 12th month, 11 of 11 patients were clinically euthyroid: 1 showed a slight increase of TSH (4.2 mL).
None of the patients with subclinical hypothyroidism started L-thyroxin therapy.
At the 6-mo scintiscan, the persistence of an autonomous nodule with complete or partial suppression of the extranodular parenchyma was disclosed in 5 of 11 subjects in subgroup A and in 6 of 11 subjects in subgroup B.
Evaluation of Local Symptomatology
In both groups, SYS was significantly (P < 0.01) lowered at the 12th month as compared with basal values. Local symptomatology improvement was significantly (P < 0.01) worse in subgroup A than in subgroup B (Table 2).
| DISCUSSION |
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TTNs are an infrequent cause of hyperthyroidism in North America, but in Europe they account for 9% of all thyrotoxicosis (15); furthermore, they are almost twice more common in iodine-deficient than in iodine-sufficient areas (16). The risk of developing thyrotoxicosis in autonomous functioning thyroid nodules is higher in older patients and in patients living in areas of relatively low iodine intake (16). Not infrequently, older patients with TTNs refuse surgery or are at high surgical risk because of atrial fibrillation and heart failure, so that nonsurgical procedures are mandatory.
In a recent retrospective study, efficacy was shown for both RAI and PEI in the treatment of TTNs between 3 and 4 cm, with both treatments obtaining remarkable shrinkage of the nodule (10); we concluded that RAI was more effective than PEI for treating hyperthyroidism, although with minimal sequelae of subclinical hypothyroidism. On the basis of this previous work (10), our group has further and more deeply investigated the issue of nonsurgical treatment of TTNs larger than 4 cm by the combined approach of PEI plus RAI.
Recently, PEI has successfully been used to treat 12 patients with large (>30108 mL; mean, 48.5 mL) TTNs, obtaining a stable euthyroidism during a 4- to 48-mo follow-up (17). The described procedure for PEI treatment was complex and time expensive. In fact, 1 or 2 cycles of PEI sessions (mean, 7) were performed and each session required multiple punctures in different portions of the nodule (17).
To the best of our knowledge, no study has been specifically aimed at evaluating the effectiveness of RAI in the treatment of TTNs larger than 4 cm, although other studies have reported successful RAI treatment in cohorts that included some large TTNs (1820). We have demonstrated that RAI can be considered a valid alternative to surgery in these conditions.
During our previous experiences with the use PEI treatment for TTNs, we observed impressive shrinkage of the nodule soon after the first 2 or 3 sessions, particularly when "complex" (cysticsolid) nodules were treated. For this reason, in the combined approach of the present study, we chose to perform PEI before rather than after RAI. We scheduled the ethanol injection, in an amount of 30% of total NV, to occur 2 mo before RAI administration to obtain significant shrinkage of the nodule, possibly without reducing RAIU. Consequently, the administered dose was decreased. The results of the present study showed that, when RAI treatment was preceded by few sessions of PEI, the RAI dose to be administered was reduced and that greater NV shrinkage and amelioration of local symptomatology were nonetheless observed. The combined treatment was therefore at least as effective as treatment with RAI alone for hyperthyroidism.
In both groups, post-treatment scintigraphy showed the persistence of autonomous tissue with suppression of normal extranodular tissue in approximately 50% of patients, despite normal TSH values; these data confirm previous reports (10,21).
| CONCLUSION |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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For correspondence or reprints contact: Matteo Zingrillo, MD, Via Bonghi no. 15, Foggia, 71-100, Italy.
E-mail: m.zingrillo{at}tin.it
| REFERENCES |
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This article has been cited by other articles:
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A. Iagaru and I. R. McDougall Treatment of Thyrotoxicosis J. Nucl. Med., March 1, 2007; 48(3): 379 - 389. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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F. Pacini Role of Percutaneous Ethanol Injection in Management of Nodular Lesions of the Thyroid Gland J. Nucl. Med., February 1, 2003; 44(2): 211 - 212. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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