Conference Coverage

Radiofrequency ablation gains favor for thyroid nodules in U.S.


 

Over the study period, 65 patients with biopsy-proven benign thyroid nodules were newly referred for RFA, with 58 referred for mass effect symptoms and seven for autonomous function.

After the multidisciplinary review, about half of the cases, 37 (56.9%), were approved for RFA.

Of the remainder, 22 (33.8%) were determined to need additional studies, just two (3.0%) were recommended for surgery, and four (6.2%) were recommended to not receive any intervention.

Of the 22 cases recommended for additional studies, 15 were subsequently recommended for RFA and four were recommended to receive surgery due to suspicious clinical findings.

Of those that underwent surgery, two showed thyroid cancer on final pathology.

Among the nodules recommended to RFA, the average nodule volume was 15.1 mL, whereas the average volume for those recommended for surgery was 40.9 mL (P = .08).

No significant complications occurred among patients that underwent RFA or those who had surgery.

“The tumor board’s multidisciplinary review was able to identify high-risk features in some patients with benign biopsies. This led to a change in recommendation from RFA to surgery for possible malignancy in a small subset of patients,” Dr. Lim noted.

In a separate analysis, Dr. Lim and colleagues reported that, among patients treated with RFA (with a mean baseline nodule volume of 11.9 mL), mean nodule volume was 6.4 mL after 1 month, 4.5 mL after 3 months, and 3.8 mL at 6 months, which were all significantly reduced versus baseline (P < .001). Similar improvements were also reported in symptom and cosmetic scores at each timepoint (all P < .001).

There were no cases of postprocedural hypothyroidism or symptomatic thyrotoxicosis.

Underlining that patients can expect noticeable improvement in symptom scores by their 30-day visit, Dr. Lim noted that patients should be warned of some early swelling.

“It is important to inform patients that they may have swelling of their treated nodule immediately after the procedure, but this should subside within a few days,” he said.

Outpatient RFA safe and efficacious

In a separate study also presented at the meeting, three practitioners described their experiences with RFA in their outpatient thyroid practices in San Antonio; Santa Monica, California; and Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.

Overall, there were 68 cases involving benign, class II thyroid nodules, and the authors reported average procedure times of under an hour, with actual RFA time varying from 7 to 22 minutes.

Of note, for nodules larger than 4.5 cm, two procedures were necessary to achieve desired results.

Excluding the larger nodules requiring more than one procedure, there was an average decrease in nodule size of 48% at 1 month and a decrease of 82% after 3 months in more than 80% of cases.

None of the cases required surgery. There were no major complications, and all patients had preserved baseline thyroid function.

“This preliminary study of 68 patients shows how thyroid RFA is safe and efficacious when performed in an endocrine outpatient office practice,” Kathleen Hands, MD, of the Thyroid Center of South Texas, and coauthors concluded.

Insurance coverage an issue in U.S.

Among much larger studies demonstrating the safety and efficacy of RFA for benign nodules, a study of 450 Chinese patients published in January showed RFA to be superior to conventional thyroidectomy in terms of patient satisfaction, postoperative quality of life, and shorter hospital stay, although the caveat was it took longer to achieve nodule volume reduction.

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