Endocrine Journal
Online ISSN : 1348-4540
Print ISSN : 0918-8959
ISSN-L : 0918-8959

This article has now been updated. Please use the final version.

Usefulness of serum thyrotropin for risk prediction of differentiated thyroid cancers does not apply to microcarcinomas: results of 1870 Chinese patients with thyroid nodules
Lei ShiYushu LiHaixia GuanChenyan LiLiangfeng ShiZhongyan ShanWeiping Teng
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JOURNAL FREE ACCESS Advance online publication

Article ID: EJ12-0154

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Abstract
The objectives of this study were to investigate whether preoperative serum thyrotropin (TSH) concentrations can be used for risk prediction of differentiated thyroid cancers (DTC), in particular, microcarcinomas (DTMC), which may be in an early stage of development of DTC. The cohort consisted of 1870 patients who underwent surgery on thyroid nodules at a single hospital in an iodine-sufficient region in China was retrospectively studied. Serum TSH and anti-thyroid antibodies were measured and diagnoses were based on surgical pathology reports. Of 1870 patients, 14.4% (n=269) had DTC. Eighty-nine DTCs were DTMC. As TSH increased, the prevalence of DTC rose clearly. The odds ratio in favor of having DTC with a serum TSH 1.9-4.8mIU/L and > 4.8mIU/L, compared with having a serum TSH 1.0-1.9 mIU/L were 1.57 (95%CI 1.03-2.40, P=0.038) and 5.71 (95%CI 2.31-14.14, P=0.0002), respectively. Similar pattern was yielded when excluding subjects with high thyroid autoantibodies. Higher TSH was also associated with lymph nodes metastasis and advanced disease (stage III and IV). However, preoperative TSH was 1.17 mIU/L in patients with DTMC vs. 1.08 mIU/L in patients with benign pathology (P = 0.80). The pattern of escalating prevalence with higher TSH did not apply to DTMC either. In conclusion, serum TSH is not a good risk predictor of DTMCs. Elevated TSH level may be related to advanced stage, that is progression of thyroid cancer, but not with development of thyroid cancer, since microcarcinomas does not have any relation with TSH level.
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