scholarly journals Effect of Early Referral to an Endocrinologist on Efficiency and Cost of Evaluation and Development of Treatment Plan in Patients with Thyroid Nodules

1998 ◽  
Vol 83 (11) ◽  
pp. 3803-3807 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Ortiz ◽  
Kenneth H. Hupart ◽  
Charles R. DeFesi ◽  
Martin I. Surks

Radionuclide uptake and scan and sonogram, frequently ordered before referral to an endocrinologist, are expensive and poor predictors of thyroid nodule malignancy. We estimated costs of excessive imaging and other studies by reviewing the records of all patients (n = 70) referred to a single, consulting endocrinologist, for thyroid nodule evaluation in a 2-yr interval and subsequently, presenting only pertinent histories and results of physical examinations, thyroid function tests, and thyroid autoantibodies, to a second, reviewing endocrinologist (RE) who was blinded to diagnosis and management. Concordance in diagnosis and management between consulting endocrinologist and RE was 87.1% and 93.4%, respectively. Accuracy of diagnosis, loss of patient’s time (8.7 h, average), and cost of unnecessary testing, defined as tests not required by the RE for diagnosis and management according to published guidelines, were determined. Unnecessary testing included 153 physician’s office or diagnostic laboratory visits, 44 sets of thyroid function tests, 32 radionuclide uptake and scan, 39 thyroid sonograms, and 3 computed tomography scans. The total direct cost of unnecessary tests was estimated at $27,290 ($390/patient) in addition to costs of 30 unnecessary physician’s office visits. Only 2 of 8 surgical referrals required surgery, whereas 6 other patients required surgery, including 3 with papillary carcinoma. We conclude that early referral to an endocrinologist of patients with suspected thyroid nodules results in significant savings in cost of evaluation, patient’s time, and increased diagnostic precision. Six of the 8 patients referred for surgery before endocrine consultation had benign thyroid disease that did not require surgery. Six additional patients were referred to surgery, 3 of whom had papillary thyroid carcinoma. Early referral of patients with suspected thyroid nodules to an endocrinologist results in significant savings in both cost and patient’s time as well as increased precision of diagnosis.

2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. A923-A923
Author(s):  
Jana Havranova ◽  
Thomas Gallagher ◽  
Mohammad Ishaq Arastu

Abstract Introduction: Thyroid nodules are very common. They occur more commonly in women with an increased prevalence of thyroid nodules reported in pregnancy. Most thyroid nodules diagnosed during pregnancy are benign. Pregnancy causes major physiological changes including changes in the levels of thyroid hormones and the elevation of thyroid binding globulin. Thyroid nodules may also occur in people with abnormal thyroid function tests manifesting as hyperthyroidism or hypothyroidism. We present a unique case of a new diagnosis of a large thyroid nodule that has significantly decreased in size after 20 months postpartum. Case description: Patient is a 31 year old female with past medical history of anxiety and white coat hypertension who was diagnosed with a 3.3 x 2.3 x 2.1 cm thyroid nodule a month following delivery. Patient did not have any abnormalities in her thyroid function tests before, during, or after pregnancy. She remained euthyroid throughout the pregnancy and in the postpartum period. Fine needle aspiration biopsy of the nodule showed atypia of undetermined significance (Bethesda Category III). The specimen was further analyzed by afirma testing that confirmed benign pathology. Twenty months postpartum, the thyroid nodule significantly decreased in size to 1.9 x 1.4 x 1.2 cm. Conclusion: Thyroid hormone levels physiologically change during pregnancy and this may affect the growth of thyroid nodules. We just presented a patient who exhibited a significant decrease in the size of her thyroid nodule. Sahin et al. showed that while the size of the thyroid nodule increases during pregnancy the number of nodules remains unaffected. Kung et al. showed that pregnancy is associated with an increase in the size of preexisting thyroid nodules as well as the number of newly developed thyroid nodules. Vanucchi et al. showed that although the thyroid gland becomes larger, particularly in late pregnancy, the sizes of any preexisting thyroid nodules remained unchanged and patients’ thyroid gland size returned to normal after delivery. The current literature provides conflicting data on this topic. The true association between pregnancy and thyroid nodules is unknown. Contemporary literature is ambiguous on this topic and more scientific studies are required to find the true association between pregnancy, the formation of thyroid nodules, and increase in the size or number of thyroid nodules.


1998 ◽  
pp. 562-564 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Luboshitzky ◽  
G Qupti ◽  
A Ishai ◽  
M Dharan

A 27-year-old woman with no previous personal or family history of thyroid disease was referred to us for the evaluation of thyroid nodule, five months postpartum. Thyroid scintigraphy demonstrated a left cold nodule. Fine needle aspiration cytology of the nodule showed a mixture of colloid, follicular cells and lymphocytes, suggesting lymphocytic thyroiditis. Thyroid function tests were normal and thyroid autoantibodies were negative. After two months the thyroid nodule was not palpated and thyroid scintigraphy returned to normal. Thyroid function tests remained normal twelve months after delivery. These findings suggest that postpartum thyroiditis may present as a localized transient form and should be considered in the differential diagnosis of painless solitary nodule that appears postpartum.


1984 ◽  
Vol 5 (9) ◽  
pp. 259-272
Author(s):  
Thomas P. Foley

The diagnostic evaluation of the patient with thyromegaly will be determined by the clinical history and an examination of the thyroid gland (Table 9). In most instances the diagnosis will not be in doubt, and only a few tests will be necessary. For example, the euthyroid adolescent female with an asymmetrically or symmetrically enlarged, firm thyroid gland has a presumptive diagnosis of CLT, and only tests of thyroid function (T4 and TSH) and thyroid antibodies may be needed for confirmation. Similarly, the patient with clinical symptoms and signs of hyperthyroidism, exophthalmus, and a diffusely enlarged, soft thyroid gland has a presumptive diagnosis of Graves disease. The necessary tests include only a measurement of T4, an estimate of free T4, and WBC and differential counts prior to the initiation of antithyroid drug therapy. [See table in the PDF file] In the absence of an obvious diagnosis, the clinician will select the specific diagnostic tests depending upon the examination of the thyroid gland. The cause of smooth, symmetrical, diffuse enlargement of the thyroid gland can be suspected with careful history for familial disease, history of exposure to goitrogens and goitrogenic drugs, and the determination of thyroid antibodies in serum. If the clinical history is suggestive of hyperthyroidism, the tests of thyroid function tests should include determination of serum T3 concentration; if the history is compatible with euthyroidism or hypothyroidism, thyroid function tests should include determination of serum TSH concentration for the presence of compensated primary hypothyroidism. If results of these tests are normal, no additional tests are necessary, and the patient should be reassured and seen again in six months. If the patient has a test that is negative for thyroid antibodies and an elevation of serum TSH concentration, a radioactive [123I]iodide uptake and perchlorate discharge test will be helpful in the diagnosis of familial dyshormonogenesis. The patient with constitutional symptoms of inflammatory disease, history of a recent upper tract respiratory infection, and a tender or nontender enlarged thyroid gland may have subacute thyroiditis; a low or absent uptake of radioiodine with high-normal or elevated T4 and T3 concentrations will be suggestive of that diagnosis. In patients with thyromegaly and mild symptoms of hyperthyroidism, a TRH test will help to discriminate hyperthyroxinemia secondary to increased or abnormal serum thyroxine binding proteins from early Graves disease, factitious hyperthyroidism, toxic thyroiditis, and TSH-mediated hyperthyroidism. The T3 suppression test is a definitive diagnostic test for early, mild Graves disease. The euthyroid patient with mild-to-moderate thyromegaly and tests that are negative for thyroid antibodies usually deserves no further diagnostic evaluation, but should be followed with a presumptive diagnosis of idiopathic goiter or mild CLT. On follow-up evaluation, initially at six-month intervals and subsequently at yearly intervals, the patient should have a clinical and biochemical assessment until thyromegaly regresses and the gland is normal in size and consistency. The patient with a nontender, firm, irregular enlargement of the thyroid gland usually has CLT. If results of thyroid function tests are normal and tests for thyroid antibodies are negative, the patient should be seen again in four to six months and serum thyroid antibody determinations again performed. Another test that may give abnormal results in patients with CLT is the perchlorate discharge test. The approach to the patient with the solitary thyroid nodule differs from that of the previously described clinical presentations. The most important studies for the patient with a thyroid nodule are those designed to determine the structure and consistency of the thyroid gland, namely, ultrasonography to distinguish between solid and cystic lesions, and the radionuclide scan to determine whether the nodule is functioning (hot) or nonfunctioning (cold). To assure that the thyroid nodule is not associated with a nonsurgical lesion such as Hashimoto thyroiditis, serum thyroid antibody determinations are important. As malignancy of the thyroid gland is usually not associated with abnormalities of thyroid function, it is important to perform laboratory tests to exclude hyperthyroidism (a serum T3 determination) and hypothyroidism (a serum TSH determination) at the time of initial evaluation. Additional tests are usually not necessary unless the patient had mild hyperthyroidism with an autonomously functioning nodule, in which case the T3 suppression test and TRH test are often useful; rarely, the TSH stimulation test is helpful in determing whether thyroid tissue throughout the remainder of the gland is suppressed. A solitary, solid, nonfunctioning (cold) nodule requires excisional biopsy.


2019 ◽  
Vol 25 (12) ◽  
pp. 1263-1267 ◽  
Author(s):  
Poorani Nallam Goundan ◽  
Stephanie L. Lee

Objective: To correlate the size of autonomously functioning thyroid nodules (AFTNs) with thyroid function tests. Methods: A retrospective analysis was performed of data from patients with a diagnosis of a single AFTN who were seen in a university-based endocrinology clinic between January 1, 2003, and December 31, 2015. Patients with a nuclear thyroid scan confirming the presence of an AFTN without significant cystic degeneration were included in the study. Results: The volume of the AFTN and the corresponding thyroid function tests were compared in 32 patients who met inclusion criteria. There was no correlation between the volume of the AFTN and thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) levels ( r2 = 0.044). There was also no volume threshold below which an AFTN was always associated with a TSH within the reference range. Conclusion: The results agree with the findings of other recent studies comparing the volume of AFTNs with TSH levels, suggesting that smaller nodules can still demonstrate subclinical and overt hyperthyroidism and that a normal TSH level does not preclude the presence of an AFTN. Abbreviations: AFTN = autonomously functioning thyroid nodule; T3 = triiodothyronine; T4 = thyroxine; TSH = thyroid-stimulating hormone


2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 34-37
Author(s):  
Santosh Pradhan ◽  
Vivek Pant ◽  
Keyoor Gautam ◽  
Devish Pyakurel ◽  
Abha Shrestha

Thyroid function tests are frequently ordered test. Infrequently, the automated thyroid hormone assay system is subjected to interference which may yield false results, thus leading to inappropriate diagnosis and management. We report an unusual case of clinically misdiagnosed subclinical hyperthyroidism with undetectable TSH due to negative interference in particular TSH assay platforms in a young Nepalese male.


Author(s):  
Pinar Karakaya ◽  
Bahar Ozdemir ◽  
Bulent Yaprak ◽  
Meral Mert

Abstract Background: Fine needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) is currently a widely accepted screening procedure in diagnosis of thyroid nodules, there has been confusion related to diagnostic terminology in the assessment of samples. This confusion has been caused by multiple category names, descriptive reports without assigning to a category, and different terminologies used for surgical pathology. We aimed to evaluate correlations between US characteristics, cytologic results of FNAB, and thyroid antibodies, calcitonin, and thyroid function tests in patients presented with thyroid nodules, and to contribute in diagnosis, treatment, and patient follow-up. Methods: A total of 1639 patients with thyroid nodules who applied to outpatient clinic of endocrinology between dates April and May 2017, had FNAB under US guideline, and their pathologic evaluation was performed according to Bethesda classification. Serological and hormonal tests were also performed for each patient. Results: The mean age of study group was 50 (range interval= 14-90) years. The median of node-diameter1 was 17.5 (range=1-51) mm, and median of node-diameter2 was 12 (range=8-33) mm. Of US characteristics, echogenicity, microcalcification, irregular borders, and solitary nodules were determined in 4.4%, 54%, 71.2%, and 86.6% of cohort respectively. Elevated anti-TPO was determined in 64.6%. Cytologic readings were reported as 15.8% nondiagnostic, 53.8% atypia of undetermined significance/follicular lesion of undetermined significance, 28.8% benign, 0.4% suspicious for follicular nodule, and 1.2% malign.   Conclusion: Measurement of thyroid autoantiboides, calcitonin, and thyroid function tests have good correlations with Bethesda classification in patients with thyroid nodules.


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