Treatment with 15 mCi of radioiodine (RAI) leads to low hypothyroidism rates in adult patients with toxic multinodular goiter (TMNG), with high cure rates and significant volume reduction, according to a study. This effect persists in the long term.
A total of 153 RAI-naïve patients with TMNG were included in this population-based, retrospective analysis conducted in Siena, Italy, with up to 12 years of follow-up. The investigators assessed thyroid functions, antithyroid antibodies, and ultrasound scans before and yearly after RAI. The following outcomes were measured: hyperthyroidism cure, hypothyroidism, volume reduction, nadir and regain, and antibody titre change.
Mean volume reductions ≥50 percent were observed at 3 years after RAI, with the greatest annual reduction seen during the first year (30±17.8 percent; p<0.001). Majority of the patients (60 percent) achieved their volume nadir 3 to 6 years after RAI. Twenty-two patients had volume regain, but the net reduction was statistically significant as late as 9 years post-RAI (p=0.005).
Mean time to hypothyroidism onset was 2.7±2.4 years and correlated with greater decrease in volume (p=0.01). The number of hyperthyroid patients decreased by nearly 50 percent per year without additional RAI during the first 3 years post-treatment. No statistically significant association was observed between antibody titres and thyroid functions, except for antithyrotropin receptor antibodies and hyperthyroidism (p=0.004).
Of the patients, 61.6 percent were euthyroid, 11 percent hyperthyroid (4.8 percent over), and 27.4 percent hypothyroid (2.7 percent overt) at the end of follow-up. Hyperthyroidism was cured in 89 percent of patients.