AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study analyzes the effectiveness of routine neck ultrasounds (US) in low-intermediate-risk papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) patients who show no signs of disease after treatment, highlighting that recurrences mainly occur 2-8 years post-therapy.
  • - Conducted with 93 patients across Singapore, Saudi Arabia, and Argentina, the research found that only 5.4% developed structural recurrences within a median follow-up of 5 years, while 20.4% had indeterminate findings that led to extra tests without significant results.
  • - The conclusion suggests that for patients with no suspicious US results and low thyroglobulin levels, frequent ultrasounds yield mostly non-actionable findings rather than detecting serious

Article Abstract

Background: American Thyroid Association (ATA) low-intermediate-risk papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) patients without structural and biochemical evidence of disease on initial post-treatment evaluation have a low risk of recurrence. Studies have shown that with current ultrasound scans (US) and thyroglobulin assays, recurrences mostly occurred 2-8 years after initial therapy. The ATA recommends that neck US be done 6-12 months after surgery to establish patient's response to therapy, then periodically depending on risk of recurrence. The lack of clarity in recommendations on timing of follow-up US and fear of recurrence leads to frequent tests.

Objectives: To evaluate the utility of routine neck US in ATA low-intermediate-risk PTC patients with no structural disease on neck US and non-stimulated thyroglobulin <1.0 ng/mL after initial therapy.

Methods: A retrospective study of 93 patients from Singapore, Saudi Arabia and Argentina with ATA low (n = 49) to intermediate (n = 44) risk PTC was conducted between 1998 and 2017. The outcome was to measure the frequency of identifying structural disease recurrence and non-actionable US abnormalities.

Results: Over a median follow-up of 5 years, five of the 93 patients (5.4%) developed structural neck recurrence on US at a median of 2.5 years after initial treatment. Indeterminate US abnormalities were detected in 19 of the 93 patients (20.4%) leading to additional tests, which did not detect significant disease.

Conclusion: In ATA low-intermediate-risk PTC with no suspicious findings on neck US and a non-stimulated thyroglobulin of <1.0 ng/mL after initial therapy, frequent US is more likely to identify non-actionable abnormalities than clinically significant disease.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cen.14325DOI Listing

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