TY - JOUR T1 - Percutaneous Ethanol Injection plus Radioiodine Versus Radioiodine Alone in the Treatment of Large Toxic Thyroid Nodules JF - Journal of Nuclear Medicine JO - J Nucl Med SP - 207 LP - 210 VL - 44 IS - 2 AU - Matteo Zingrillo AU - Sergio Modoni AU - Matteo Conte AU - Vincenzo Frusciante AU - Vincenzo Trischitta Y1 - 2003/02/01 UR - http://jnm.snmjournals.org/content/44/2/207.abstract N2 - Therapeutic options for toxic thyroid nodules (TTNs) are surgery, radioiodine (RAI), and percutaneous ethanol injection (PEI). Surgery is generally considered for TTNs larger than 4 cm. However, some patients may be at high surgical risk. The purpose of the study was to evaluate the efficacy of 2 nonsurgical modalities for these TTNs. Methods: Twenty-two patients with TTNs larger than 4 cm were randomly assigned to 2 different treatments: to 11 (subgroup A), RAI was administered at a dose of 12,580 kBq/mL of nodular volume (NV) and was corrected for 100% 24-h 131I uptake (RAIU); to 11 (subgroup B), 2–4 PEI sessions (ethanol injected = 30% NV) preceded 2 mo of 24-h RAIU and RAI dosing. Inclusion criteria were clinical and biochemical hyperthyroidism; a single palpable, hot nodule at 99mTc scintigraphy; and high surgical risk or refusal to have surgery. Patients gave informed consent. Local symptoms were evaluated by a previously validated score (symptom score, or SYS). Results: Both treatments were well tolerated. Subgroup B showed a significant reduction of NV 2 mo after PEI: 33.6 ± 18.5 versus 60.8 ± 29.5 mL. Their 24-h RAIU was similar to that of subgroup A: 53.9 ± 13.9 versus 61.8% ± 11.0%. Consequently, the administered RAI dose was significantly lower for subgroup B (730 ± 245 MBq) than for subgroup A (1,048 ± 392 MBq). Twelve months after RAI, subgroup B had a higher NV reduction and a lower SYS than did subgroup A. In subgroup A, 1 patient was subclinically hyperthyroid, 2 showed a slight increase of thyroid-stimulating hormone, and 1 was clinically hypothyroid. In subgroup B, 1 patient had a slight increase of thyroid-stimulating hormone. Conclusion: We demonstrated that RAI, alone or with PEI, can be considered a valid alternative for TTNs larger than 4 cm when surgery is either refused or contraindicated. PEI plus RAI can be considered when marked shrinkage of a nodule is required or when reduction of the RAI dose can prevent hospitalization. ER -