Basics & Presentation - Neck's Lumpy Riddles
- Definition: Discrete thyroid lesion, radiologically distinct from parenchyma.
- Prevalence: Common; ↑ age, female, iodine deficiency, radiation exposure. Palpable 4-7%, ultrasound 50-70%.
- Etiology:
- Benign (>90%): Colloid nodules, adenomas, cysts, Hashimoto's thyroiditis.
- Malignant (<10%): PTC (commonest), FTC, MTC, anaplastic, lymphoma.
- Clinical Features:
⭐ Most thyroid nodules are asymptomatic and benign, discovered incidentally.
- Painless neck mass (most common).
- Compressive symptoms (if large): Dysphagia, dyspnea, hoarseness (RLN involvement).
- Functional nodule (rare): Symptoms of thyrotoxicosis.
- Pain (uncommon): Suggests hemorrhage into cyst or thyroiditis.
- Red flags for malignancy: Rapid growth, firm/hard, fixed, vocal cord palsy, cervical lymphadenopathy, age <20 or >60. oka
Imaging & Labs - Scan & Scope Secrets
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Initial Labs:
- TSH: Best initial test.
- If TSH ↓: Thyroid Scintigraphy ($^{123}$I or $^{99m}$Tc).
- If TSH normal/↑: Proceed to USG.
- Serum Calcitonin: If Medullary Thyroid Carcinoma (MTC) suspected (e.g., family hx, MEN2).
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Ultrasound (USG) Neck:
- Primary imaging for all palpable/incidental nodules.
- Key for risk stratification (TIRADS).
- High-risk features: Solid, hypoechoic, microcalcifications, irregular margins, taller-than-wide, extrathyroidal extension, suspicious lymph nodes.
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Thyroid Scintigraphy:
- Indicated for low TSH nodules.
- Hot nodule (hyperfunctioning): ↓ malignancy risk.
- Cold nodule (hypofunctioning): ↑ malignancy risk (5-15%).
⭐ A suppressed TSH suggests a hyperfunctioning ("hot") nodule, which is rarely malignant; further evaluation with thyroid scintigraphy is indicated.
FNA & Bethesda - Bethesda & Beyond
- FNA (Fine Needle Aspiration): Key diagnostic tool for thyroid nodules, ideally USG-guided for accuracy.
- The Bethesda System (TBSRTC): Standardizes thyroid cytology reporting globally, crucial for guiding subsequent management decisions.
Bethesda Categories, Risk of Malignancy (ROM) & Management:
- I: ND/US (Non-Diagnostic/Unsatisfactory)
- ROM: 5-10%
- Mgmt: Repeat FNA, preferably USG-guided.
- II: Benign
- ROM: 0-3%
- Mgmt: Clinical and USG follow-up.
- III: AUS/FLUS (Atypia/Follicular Lesion of Undetermined Significance)
- ROM: 10-30%
- Mgmt: Options include Repeat FNA, molecular markers, or diagnostic surgery (lobectomy).
- IV: FN/SFN (Follicular Neoplasm/Suspicious for FN)
- ROM: 25-40%
- Mgmt: Diagnostic lobectomy; molecular markers can aid risk stratification.
- V: SM (Suspicious for Malignancy)
- ROM: 45-75%
- Mgmt: Surgical intervention: (Near)Total Thyroidectomy or Lobectomy.
- VI: Malignant
- ROM: 97-99%
- Mgmt: Therapeutic surgery: (Near)Total Thyroidectomy; lobectomy for select low-risk cancers.
⭐ Bethesda VI (Malignant) has a 97-99% risk of malignancy, typically requiring surgical intervention.
Management Flow based on Bethesda:
Management Algorithms - Surgical & Other Sorties
- Benign (II): Observe; Rpt USG/FNA if ↑size/symptoms. Surgery if compressive/cosmetic.
- Indeterminate (III, IV, V):
- AUS/FLUS (III): Rpt FNA, molecular markers, diagnostic lobectomy.
- SFN/HCN (IV): Diagnostic lobectomy.
- Susp. Malignancy (V): (Near) Total thyroidectomy or diagnostic lobectomy.
- Malignant (VI):
- DTC (PTC/FTC):
- MicroCa (<1cm, low-risk): Lobectomy.
- Else: Total thyroidectomy + CND. Lateral ND if nodes+.
- Medullary Ca: Total thyroidectomy + CND.
- Anaplastic Ca: Palliative (surgery, EBRT, chemo).
- DTC (PTC/FTC):
- Post-op DTC: RAI ablation (high-risk), TSH suppression.
⭐ Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma (PTC) is the most common thyroid malignancy and often has an excellent prognosis with appropriate treatment.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- FNAC is the cornerstone for thyroid nodule evaluation.
- Most nodules are benign; papillary carcinoma is the commonest malignancy.
- The Bethesda system for FNAC reporting guides management.
- "Cold" nodules on thyroid scan are more suspicious for malignancy.
- Key malignancy risk factors: radiation history, rapid growth, hard/fixed nodule, lymphadenopathy.
- Initial test: TSH. If TSH is normal/high, FNAC is next.
- Solitary nodules often warrant more concern than multiple nodules in a goiter.
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