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- Livia Maria Frota Lima, Trond Velde Bogsrud, Hossein Gharib, Mabel Ryder, Geoffrey Johnson, and Jolanta Durski.
- Department of Radiology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN.
- Medicine (Baltimore). 2024 Sep 6; 103 (36): e39602e39602.
PurposeThe purpose was to evaluate the pathological nature of focal thyroid uptake seen in 11C-Choline PET/CT performed for prostate cancer.Material And MethodsThe study was IRB-approved. All 11C-Choline PET/CT exam reports for studies performed between January 01, 2018, and July 30, 2021, in male patients with prostate cancer in our institution were retrospectively reviewed. Exams with "focal thyroid uptake" on their final report were selected. Patients with surgery or ablation in the thyroid prior to the PET/CT, proven parathyroid adenomas or absent thyroid ultrasound were excluded. Repeated PET/CT exams of same patient were excluded. PET images were analyzed visually and semi-quantitatively by measuring the maximum standardized uptake value (SUVmax) of the focal thyroid uptake. Available thyroid ultrasound images, cytology and pathology reports were reviewed. Statistical analyses were performed.ResultsOut of 10,047 sequential 11C-Choline PET/CT studies, 318 reports included "focal thyroid uptake." About 128 of these studies were repeat exams and were excluded. Additional 87 patients were excluded, because the uptake was determined to be adjacent, rather than confined to the thyroid gland. Out of the remaining 103 patients, 74 patients had focal thyroid uptake and concurrent thyroid sonographic evaluation. Out of the 74 focal uptakes evaluated with ultrasound, 21 were presumed benign thyroid nodules based on the ultrasound and 53 had further evaluation with biopsy. Sixty three nodules were benign (21 presumed benign on ultrasound and 42 cytology or surgical pathology-proven), 9 nodules were malignant and 2 remained indeterminate. There was no significant difference between the SUVs of the benign and malignant groups (P > .3).ConclusionIn this retrospective study of patients with prostate cancer who underwent 11C-Choline PET/CT, we identified a group of patients who underwent thyroid ultrasound for incidental finding of focal 11C-Choline thyroid uptake. Incidence of malignancy in this group was 12%. Therefore, further investigation with ultrasound and possibly ultrasound-guided biopsy may be warranted when a choline avid thyroid nodule is found incidentally on choline PET.Copyright © 2024 the Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.
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