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Arquivos Brasileiros De Endocrinologia E Metabologia | 2009

Recommendations of the Latin American Thyroid Society on diagnosis and management of differentiated thyroid cancer.

Fabián Pitoia; Laura Sterian Ward; Nelson Wohllk; Celso U. M. Friguglietti; Eduardo Tomimori; Alicia Gauna; Rosalinda Camargo; Mario Vaisman; Rubén Harach; Fernando Munizaga; Sandro Corigliano; Eduardo Pretell; Hugo Niepomniszcze

The aims of these recommendations were to develop clinical guidelines for evaluation and management of patients with differentiated thyroid cancer applicable to Latin American countries. The panel was composed by 13 members of the Latin American Thyroid Society (LATS) involved with research and management of thyroid cancer from different medical centers in Latin America. The recommendations were produced on the basis of the expert opinion of the panel with use of principles of Evidence-Based Medicine. Following a group meeting, a first draft based on evidences and the expert opinions of the panel was elaborated and, later, circulated among panel members, for further revision. After, this document was submitted to the LATS members, for commentaries and considerations, and, finally, revised and refined by the authors. The final recommendations presented in this paper represent the state of the art on management of differentiated thyroid cancer applied to all Latin American countries.


Clinical Endocrinology | 2004

Administration of a single dose of recombinant human thyrotrophin enhances the efficacy of radioiodine treatment of large compressive multinodular goitres

Marcia N.C. Silva; Ileana G.S. Rubio; Rossana Romão; Eloisa S. Gebrin; Carlos Alberto Buchpiguel; Eduardo Tomimori; Rosalinda Camargo; Maria Silvia Cardia; Geraldo Medeiros-Neto

objective  Patients with very large multinodular goitres, frequently found among elderly people, often suffering from cardiovascular or other disabling disorders, may be considered as unsuitable for surgery. We have evaluated the feasibility of relatively high‐dose 131I therapy in such patients. As subclinical or clinical hyperthyroidism is commonly found in these patients, associated with a low radioiodine (RAI) uptake at 24 h, we pretreated a group of patients with a single intramuscular injection of recombinant human TSH (rhTSH 0·45 mg) in order to increase the uptake of the therapeutic dose of RAI.


European Journal of Endocrinology | 2008

Thyroid and the environment: exposure to excessive nutritional iodine increases the prevalence of thyroid disorders in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

Rosalinda Camargo; Eduardo Tomimori; Solange Caires Neves; Ileana G.S. Rubio; Ana Luiza Galrão; Meyer Knobel; Geraldo Medeiros-Neto

OBJECTIVE To evaluate the prevalence of chronic autoimmune thyroiditis (CAT) and iodine-induced hypothyroidism, hyperthyroidism (overt and subclinical), and goiter in a population exposed to excessive iodine intake for 5 years (table salt iodine concentrations: 40-100 mg/kg salt). Design This was a population-based, cross-sectional study with 1085 participants randomly selected from a metropolitan area in São Paulo, Brazil, and conducted during the first semester of 2004. METHODS Thyroid ultrasound examination was performed in all participants and samples of urine and blood were collected from each subject. Serum levels of thyroid-stimulating hormone, free thyroxine, and anti-thyroid peroxidase (TPO) antibodies, urinary iodine concentration, thyroid volume, and thyroid echogenicity were evaluated. We also analyzed table salt iodine concentrations. RESULTS At the time the study was conducted, table salt iodine concentrations were within the new official limits (20-60 mg/kg salt). Nevertheless, in 45.6% of the participants, urinary iodine excretion was excessive (above 300 microg/l) and, in 14.1%, it was higher than 400 microg/l. The prevalence of CAT (including atrophic thyroiditis) was 16.9% (183/1085), women were more affected than men (21.5 vs 9.1% respectively, P=0.02). Hypothyroidism was detected in 8.0% (87/1085) of the population with CAT. Hyperthyroidism was diagnosed in 3.3% of the individuals (36/1085) and goiter was identified in 3.1% (34/1085). CONCLUSIONS Five years of excessive iodine intake by the Brazilian population may have increased the prevalence of CAT and hypothyroidism in subjects genetically predisposed to thyroid autoimmune diseases. Appropriate screening for early detection of thyroid dysfunction may be considered during excessive nutritional iodine intake.


Arquivos Brasileiros De Endocrinologia E Metabologia | 2004

Avaliação ultra-sonográfica da tireóide e determinação da iodúria em escolares de diferentes regiões do Estado de São Paulo

Glaucia Duarte; Eduardo Tomimori; Rosângela A. Boriolli; Jerenice Esdras Ferreira; Regina Maria Catarino; Rosalinda Camargo; Geraldo Medeiros-Neto

We have examined, by ultrasonographic studies, the thyroid gland of 844 schoolchildren, aged between 6 and 14 years old (423 girls, 421 boys). There was a progressive increase of the thyroid volume with aging with a positive and significant correlation with the body surface area. The presence of enlarged thyroid gland was rarely seen, being present in only 1.6% of the studied cohort. A few thyroid gland abnormalities were noticed such as hemiagenesia (4 children), nodules and cysts and hypoechogenicity (total: 1.4% of all subjects examined). It was clearly demonstrated that the urinary excretion of iodine was elevated being above 300ug Iodine/L in 53% of the schoolchildren examined. Assays for the iodine concentration in the domestic salt samples revealed values between 28.1 and 63.3mgI/kg of salt. We concluded that the schoolchildren population of the State of Sao Paulo may be under an excessive daily ingestion of iodine. This may induce, if extrapolated to the general population, subclinical hyperthyroidism in the elderly and possibly an increment in the prevalence of chronic autoimmune thyroiditis.


Arquivos Brasileiros De Endocrinologia E Metabologia | 2009

Latin American Thyroid Society recommendations for the management of thyroid nodules

Rosalinda Camargo; Sandro Corigliano; Celso U. M. Friguglietti; Alicia Gauna; Rubén Harach; Fernando Munizaga; Hugo Niepomniszcze; Fabián Pitoia; Eduardo Pretell; Mario Vaisman; Laura Sterian Ward; Nelson Wohllk; Eduardo Tomimori

Several guidelines on diagnosis and treatment of thyroid nodules and cancer have recently been published. However, recommended practices are not always appropriate to different settings or countries. The aim of this consensus was to develop Clinical Guidelines for evaluation and management of patients with thyroid nodules applicable to Latin American countries. The panel was composed by 13 members of the Latin American Thyroid Society involved with research and management of thyroid nodules and cancer from different medical centers in Latin America. The consensus was produced based on the expert opinion of the panel with use of principles of evidence-based medicine. Following a group meeting, a first draft based on the expert opinion of the panel was elaborated and later circulated among panel members for further revision. After revision, this document was submitted to all LATS members for commentaries and considerations and finally revised and refined by the authors. The final recommendations represent state of the art on management of thyroid nodules applied to all Latin American countries.


Thyroid | 2001

Aggressive metastatic follicular thyroid carcinoma with anaplastic transformation arising from a long-standing goiter in a patient with Pendred’s syndrome

Rosalinda Camargo; Eduardo Limbert; Mary P. Gillam; Maria Manuela Henriques; Carlos Fernandes; Ana Luísa Catarino; Jorge Soares; Venancio Avancini Ferreira Alves; Peter Kopp; Geraldo Medeiros-Neto

In this article we describe detailed pathological and molecular genetics studies in a consanguineous kindred with Pendreds syndrome. The index patient was a 53-year-old female patient with congenital deafness and goiter. Her parents were first-degree cousins. She had a large goiter (150 g) that had been present since childhood. One of her sisters and a niece are also deaf and have goiter as well. The presence of Pendreds syndrome was confirmed by a positive perchlorate test and the demonstration of a Mondini malformation. Thyroid function tests (under levothyroxine [LT4] therapy) were in the euthyroid range with a thyrotropin [TSH] level of 2.8 microU/mL (0.2-3.2), a serum total thyroxine (T4) of 90 nmol/L (54-142), and a serum total triiodothyronine (T3) of 2.7 nmol/L (0.8-2.4). Total thyroidectomy was performed, and the mass in the right lobe was found to have invaded adjacent tissues. The histopathological findings were consistent with a follicular carcinoma with areas of anaplastic transformation and lung metastasis. The patient was treated twice with 100 mCi 131iodine (3,700 MBq) and received suppressive doses of LT4. Postoperatively, the serum thyroglobulin (Tg) levels remained markedly elevated (2,352 to 41,336 ng/mL). The patient died of a sudden severe episode of hemoptysis. Sequence analysis of the PDS gene performed with DNA from the two relatives with Pendreds syndrome revealed the presence of a deletion of thymidine 279 in exon 3, a point mutation that results in a frameshift and a premature stop codon at codon 96 in the pendrin molecule. We concluded that prolonged TSH stimulation because of iodine deficiency or dyshormonogenesis in combination with mutations of oncogenes and/or tumor suppressor genes, may result in the development of follicular thyroid carcinomas that undergo transformation into anaplastic cancers. It is likely that these pathogenetic mechanisms have been involved in the development of aggressive metastatic thyroid cancer in this unusual patient with Pendreds syndrome.


Clinics | 2006

Prevalence of chronic autoimmune thyroiditis in the urban area neighboring a petrochemical complex and a control area in Sao Paulo, Brazil

Rosalinda Camargo; Eduarto K. Tomimori; Solange Caires Neves; Meyer Knobel; Geraldo Medeiros-Neto

PURPOSE To evaluate the prevalence of chronic autoimmune thyroiditis in 2 urban areas of metropolitan São Paulo (Brazil): Polo Area neighboring a large petrochemical complex and São Bernardo Campo Area (control area). SUBJECTS AND METHODS Subjects were randomly included from the adult population (20 to 70 years of age) of both genders (women 80%, men 20%) who voluntarily agreed to participate. From the Polo Area, in the vicinity of a large petrochemical industrial complex, 409 subjects were included; from the control area (São Bernardo Campo Area) 420 individuals were included. All subjects were clinically examined, and a detailed record of past thyroid illness and medications was obtained. Ultrasonographic studies were performed using a portable GE Medical Systems apparatus. Blood samples were obtained for free T4, serum TSH, and serum anti-thyroid peroxidase autoantibodies. Urine specimens were collected in Monovette syringes for assaying iodine content. Salt samples were collected at households, and the iodine content was measured. RESULTS Chronic autoimmune thyroiditis was diagnosed both echographically (marked hypoechogenicity) and immunologically (presence of autoantibodies against thyroid peroxidase). In the Polo Area, 15.6% of the examined population had chronic autoimmune thyroiditis, and in the control area (São Bernardo Campo Area), 19.5% of the population had evidence of chronic autoimmune thyroiditis (P > 0.057, not significant). The prevalence of hypothyroidism was 4.9% in the Polo Area and 8.3% in the São Bernardo Campo Area (P = 0.0461 significant). Taking the 2 populations together, 6.6% had hypothyroidism (about one third of these patients were on L-T4 treatment). The mean thyroid volume was 11.2 mL. Domestic salt had a normal concentration of iodine (35.5 + 6.61 mg/kg). Urinary excretion of iodine was above 300 microg Iodine/L in 58.5% of the total population. CONCLUSION The high iodine intake (above 300 microg Iodine/L of urine) that was present from 1998 through 2005 may be related to a higher prevalence of chronic autoimmune thyroiditis in both areas that were studied. There was no apparent or documented relationship of chronic autoimmune thyroiditis prevalence to the proximity to the petrochemical complex.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2008

Association of Low Sodium-Iodide Symporter Messenger Ribonucleic Acid Expression in Malignant Thyroid Nodules with Increased Intracellular Protein Staining

Ana Karina M. B. Sodré; Ileana G.S. Rubio; Ana Luiza Galrão; Meyer Knobel; Eduardo Tomimori; Venâncio Avancini Ferreira Alves; Cristina Takami Kanamura; Carlos Alberto Buchpiguel; Tomoco Watanabe; Celso U. M. Friguglietti; Marco Aurélio Vamondes Kulcsar; Geraldo Medeiros-Neto; Rosalinda Camargo

CONTEXT The expression of sodium iodide symporter (NIS) is required for iodide uptake in thyroid cells. Benign and malignant thyroid tumors have low iodide uptake. However, previous studies by RT-PCR or immunohistochemistry have shown divergent results of NIS expression in these nodules. OBJECTIVE The objective of the study was to investigate NIS mRNA transcript levels, compare with NIS and TSH receptor proteins expression, and localize the NIS protein in thyroid nodules samples and their surrounding nonnodular tissues (controls). DESIGN NIS mRNA levels, quantified by real-time RT-PCR, and NIS and TSH receptor proteins, evaluated by immunohistochemistry, were examined in surgical specimens of 12 benign and 13 malignant nodules and control samples. RESULTS When compared with controls, 83.3% of the benign and 100% of the malignant nodules had significantly lower NIS gene expression. Conversely, 66.7% of the benign and 100% of malignant nodules had stronger intracellular NIS immunostaining than controls. Low gene expression associated with strong intracellular immunostaining was most frequently detected in malignant (100%) than benign nodules (50%; P = 0.005). NIS protein was located at the basolateral membrane in 24% of the control samples, 8.3% of the benign, and 15.4% of the malignant nodules. The percentage of benign nodules with strong TSH receptor positivity (41.6%) was higher than malignant (7.7%). CONCLUSION We confirmed that reduced NIS mRNA expression in thyroid malignant nodules is associated with strong intracellular protein staining and may be related to the inability of the NIS protein to migrate to the cellular basolateral membrane. These results may explain the low iodide uptake of malignant nodules.


Thyroid | 2001

Searching for Iodine Deficiency Disorders in Schoolchildren from Brazil: The Thyromobil Project

Adriana Rossi; Eduardo Tomimori; Rosalinda Camargo; Geraldo Medeiros-Neto

661 THE EVALUATION OF IODINE DEFICIENCY DISORDERS (IDD) in Europe was recently conducted using an adapted Thyromobil vehicle equipped with ultrasound apparatus, a computer unit, and a freezer to store specimens and supplies (1). The Thyromobil traveled from one country to another, collecting data on thyroid volume, urinary excretion of iodine, and content of iodine in the local source of salt. The excellent results of the Thyromobil project in Europe encouraged


Arquivos Brasileiros De Endocrinologia E Metabologia | 2004

[Ultrasonographic evaluation of thyroid nodules: comparison with cytologic and histologic diagnosis].

Eduardo Tomimori; Hélio Bisi; Geraldo Medeiros-Neto; Rosalinda Camargo

The purpose of this study was to evaluate our ultrasonographic classification of thyroid nodules, based on echo structure, echogenicity, calcification, margin and analysis of the surrounding parenchyma. From January 1998 to January 2002, 2,468 consecutive patients with thyroid nodules were referred for thyroid ultrasonography and ultrasound-guided fine needle aspiration biopsy (USFNAB) in our Thyroid Unit. Among 1,039 nodules classified as benign on ultrasound, 998 (96.1%) were also benign on cytology, 37 (3.6%) were suspicious and only 4 (0.4%) were malignant. On the other hand, among 153 nodules classified as suspicious on ultrasound, 20 (13.1%) were suspicious and 88 (57,5%) were malignant on cytology. Of the 71 nodules suspicious on ultrasound submitted to surgery, 67 (94.3%) were malignant and 56 (96.6%) of 58 nodules considered benign were benign on pathologic studies. In conclusion, we advocate USFNAB in nodules classified as indeterminate or suspicious. Nodules classified as benign may be followed up at periodic intervals.

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Meyer Knobel

University of São Paulo

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Hélio Bisi

University of São Paulo

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Hélio Bisi

University of São Paulo

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Laura Sterian Ward

State University of Campinas

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