Thyroid nodule Flashcards
What types of nodules can appear on the thyroid?
Nodules may be cystic, colloid, hyperplastic, adenomatous or cancerous.
Goitre is enlargement of the thyroid gland but goitres can be multinodular or solitary
What are the most common causes of thyroid nodules?
- Iodine deficiency (not UK) –> goitre
- Where iodine is added to salt –> AI conditions (Hashimoto’s thyroiditis and Graves’) are more common causes
- Medication (lithium and amiodarone) –> thyroid enlargement
- May also occur in pregnancy and menopause
How common are thyroid lumps?
Present in 4-7% of adults
- 95% are benign
- Uncommon in children and adolescents but if present then more likely to be cancerous
What are the risk factors for thyroid nodules?
- Low iodine consumption*
- Excessive iodine consumption (seaweed) –> goitres
- Malignancy
- Radiation exposure
- Smoking
- FH
- Medication e.g. amiodarone and lithium
Research shows that milk alternative drinks do not have enough iodine.
How do thyroid lumps present? What are the red flags?
- Asymptomatic -noticed by family or in mirror
- Tracheal compression
- Thyroid moves with swallowing
- ?Asymmetry/enlargement
- ?Tenderness
- Regional lymphadenopathy
Red flags -
- stridor associated with thyroid mass
- child
- hoarseness or voice changes
- rapidly enlarging
- FH of thyroid cancer, radiation, pain
Name some causes of thryoid lumps and swellings (10)
- Non-toxic (simple) goitre - non-functioning nodules with normal TFTs
- Toxic multinodular goitre - functioning with abnormal TFTs
- Retrosternal goitre (multinodular)
- Hyperplastic nodule (single or part of multinodular goitre)
- Colloid nodule
- Thyroid adenoma
- Thyroid cyst
- Thyroid carcinoma
- Graves’ - diffuse enlarged and overactive thyroid
- Hashimoto’s thryoiditis - AI destruction of the gland may cause diffuse enlargement
- De Quervain’s thyroiditis - neck pain, lethargy soon after URTI
- Active suppurative thyroiditis - from bacterial or fungal infection causing abscess
Name some non-thyroid causes of lumps/swellings in the neck.
- Congenital/developmental:
- Thyroglossal cyst
- Brachial cyst
- Pharyngeal pouch
- Dermoid cyst
- Laryngocele
- Lymph nodes
- Salivary gland swellings
- Non-thyroid benign and malignant tumours - lipoma, fibroma, vascular tumours, sarcomas
What investigations would you do for thyroid nodules?
TFTs - if abnormal TFTs and no suspicious features then refer; thyroid swelling and normal TFTs are red flag and should also be referred. Refer where cancer is supected.
US - good for detection and characterising thyroid nodules. Helps inform aspiration and cytology.
FNA - under US guidance
Basal plasma calcitonin and carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) - measure if thyroid medullary cancer is suspected
CT/MRI - may be required to study mediastinal spread and regional lymph node involvement
Describe the thyroid nodule classification on ultrasound.
British Thyroid Association (BTA) U-Classification
Nodules are classified into categories U1 to U5, based on :
- echogenicity,
- contour,
- halo,
- colloid artefact,
- calcification and
- vascularity
- U1 = normal thyroid parenchyma,
- U2 = benign nodule,
- U3 = indeterminate/equivocal nodule,
- U4 = suspicious nodule
- U5 a= malignant nodule.
FNAC is recommended for nodules classified as U3 or above.
Describe the thyroid nodule classification on cytopathology.
Bethesda system - categorises malignancy risk on FNAC
How do malignant nodules appear on uptake scans?
Usually cold nodules