Rationale: I-131 radioiodine false-positive findings in postoperative patients with differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) should be recognized to avoid unnecessary therapies. Patient concerns and diagnoses: A 50-year-old man underwent I-131 therapy… Click to show full abstract
Rationale: I-131 radioiodine false-positive findings in postoperative patients with differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) should be recognized to avoid unnecessary therapies. Patient concerns and diagnoses: A 50-year-old man underwent I-131 therapy 3 times, including the initial ablative therapy after total thyroidectomy for papillary thyroid cancer. The initial I-131 posttherapeutic whole-body scintigraphy showed 2 cervical and one superior mediastinal focal I-131 positive uptake lesions. The serum thyroglobulin level was negative every time when the radioiodine therapy was performed. Although the 2 cervical positive uptake lesions disappeared after the second therapy, the superior mediastinal I-131 positive uptake persisted even after the third therapy, and this lesion was suspicion of I-131 therapy-resistant node metastasis. Interventions and outcomes: The lesion was resected, and the pathological diagnosis with immune-histochemical analysis was a thymic cyst with thymic epithelial cells having a weak expression of the sodium-iodide symporter (NIS). Lessons: The false-positive result may be attributed to the NIS expression in the thymic cyst epithelial cells. It is necessary to include a thymic cyst in the differential diagnosis, when I-131 uptake is noted in the superior mediastinal region on I-131 posttherapeutic scans of patients with postoperative DTC. Although the I-131 positive uptake in a thymic cyst may be influenced by the I-131 administered dose and scan timing after I-131 administration, the NIS expression may be essential to the false-positive uptake in a thymic cyst.
               
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