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Clinical manifestations and diagnosis of distant metastases of differentiated thyroid carcinoma after initial therapy

We studied 58 patients with distant metastases of differentiated thyroid carcinoma diagnosed after initial therapy. Lymph node metastases were observed in 65% of the patients on initial presentation. All lymph node metastases, ninety percent of the lung metastases and only 25% of the bone metastases were asymptomatic. Radiography revealed lytic metastases in cases of bone involvement, was normal in 39.6% of the patients, and showed micrometastases in 34.5% and macrometastases in 25.8% of the patients with lung disease. Thyroglobulin (Tg) under thyroxine use was detectable in all patients without antibodies at a cut-off > 1ng/ml, in 90% at > 5ng/ml and in 80% at > 10ng/ml, and after thyroxine withdrawal in 100% at a cut-off > 5ng/ml and in 94% at > 10ng/ml. In the case of patients with antibodies (13.8%), Tg was undetectable in half of them. Diagnostic scanning was positive in 83 and 77.6% of the patients with bone and lung metastases, respectively. After ablative therapy, the sensitivity was 100 and 93%, respectively. Eighty-five percent of patients with a negative diagnostic scan had lung metastases visible on radiographs. The determination of serum Tg is the best method in the follow-up of patients with differentiated thyroid cancer. Elevated Tg levels suggest the presence of metastases, indicating the need for ablative therapy with posttreatment scanning, which might reveal non-apparent metastases.

Thyroid cancer diagnosis; Metastases; Thyroglobulin


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