Evaluation
Treatment
Special Considerations
Random
100

You find an incidental thyroid nodule on imaging - what lab and/or imaging do you order?

TSH -- normal or elevated means nonfunctioning nodule; low or suppressed TSH suggests primary hyperthyroidism

US of thyroid + cervical lymph nodes

100

If FNA or molecular test shows malignancy or suspicion for malignancy, how is patient treated? 

SURGERY

-Low-risk micropapillary thyroid cancer <1 cm can be followed instead of surgery (without extrathyroid extension, metastatic cervical nodes, or distant mets), but should have active surveillance and have endocrine on board 

100

If molecular testing not performed with FNA, patient's with indeterminate lesions should undergo ___

Diagnostic lobectomy

100

Since the introduction of this item in 1924, iodine deficiency has essentially been eliminated in the US

Iodized table salt

200
DAILY DOUBLE

-What is a "hot" and "cold" nodule

-BONUS: Which needs FNA? 

Hot: focal increased uptake, associated with hyperfunctioning - unlikely malignant, don't need FNA

Cold: Nonfunctioning, needs FNA if meets clinical/US criteria

200

How do you treat hyperfunctioning thyroid nodules?

Radioactive iodine ablation 

-If contraindication or patient does not want, alternative is anti-thyroid therapy until euthyroid, then surgery to avoid lifelong thyroid med

200

True or False:

Thyroid nodules found in pregnancy have higher risk of being cancer

FALSE

-Nonfunctioning managed the same as nonpregnant except molecular testing

-Pregnant women with hyperfunctioning nodules should have antithyroid meds until after delivery, then should have radiouptake scans

200

This disease carries an increased incidence of papillary thyroid cancer

Graves Disease

(33-42% prevalence in those with hypofunctioning thyroid nodules) 

300

What are some US features that suggest malignancy?

Hypoechoic echogenicity

Solid

Irregular margins

Microcalcifications

Height > width

Extrathyroidal extension

Disrupted rim calcification

Cervical lymph nodes that are sus

300

FNA came back benign - do you repeat the FNA and when? 

Yes, repeat in 12-24 mo 

-If no clinical significant growth (>50% volume or 20% growth in 2 dimensions), can repeat every 3-5 years -- if grows, repeat FNA or serial US

300

True or False:

Thyroid nodules in children are more likely to be malignant than those in adults

TRUE - 22-26% increase risk

-Eval/tx is similar to adults, except molecular testing of FNA not validated so if indeterminate result, should have surgery 

300

What percentage of thyroid nodules are benign?

90-95%

400

FNA should not be performed on nodules smaller than __

1 cm

-Micropapillary usually indolent/benign, but if less than 40 y/o, consider close follow up -- consider FNA anyway if young or if patient requests

-If smaller than 1 cm but have sus features, repeat US in 6-9 months

400

When to repeat cystic nodule screening?

Same time frame, can inject with ethanol or remove surgically if recurrent

400

True or False:

In patients with multiple thyroid nodules, each nodule has the same risk of malignancy

FALSE -- each nodule has an independent risk - biopsy the shadiest nodule(s) first and monitor the more benign ones

400

True or False:

You should routinely screen for thyroid cancer with US and/or neck palpation

FALSE

-Study in South Korea showed the diagnosis increased 15-fold, but no change to mortality rate

-USPSTF rec against it

500

DAILY DOUBLE

Cystic and spongiform nodules are rarely malignant and don't require FNA evaluation, EXCEPT if measure at ___ or larger.

Bonus: When do you re-US if no FNA?

2 cm

-Repeat US in 12-24 mo

500

Solid nodules benign on FNA - what do we do with them?

-Don't need to repeat FNA, even if it grows, but should consider removing and definitely should continue to follow w/ US 

500

Patient has low to low-normal TSH and multiple nodules, what test do you order?

Radionuclide thyroid uptake scan! Figure out which ones need to be the targets for FNA

500

List 3 major risk factors for thyroid cancer

Ionizing radiation (cancer treatments, occupational exposure, nuclear fallout)

Radiation at a young age

Rapid nodule growth

Hoarseness

Family hx of thyroid cancer

Family hx of MEN2, FAP