Hi, I was wondering if I should get a second opinion on my results or if anyone
out there has had a similar experience.
First, my mom had thyroid cancer at 35. She had a multinodular goiter with
normal levels. No biopsies, just removal of the lobe with the largest nodule
(papillary/follocular mix.) A year later she had the other side removed
(although smaller nodule is was medullary.)
I'm 33, have a multinodular goiter with normal thyroid levels, normal calcitonin
levels and no tumor markers. I had a FNA 2 weeks ago. Here are the results:
-Size of thyroid: right lobe 6.4 x 2.7 x 1.7, left: 5.8 x 2.2 x 1.4
-Largest nodule: 2.6 x .9 x 1.9 cm with report:
"The scant specimen contains four groups of benign appearing follicular cells
more than 10 cells each. Interpretation therefore is limited by scant
cellularity. Rare fragment of colloid is also noted. No insignificant nuclear
atypia, nuclear grooves, or intranuclear inclusion is identified."
-nodule:7 x 5 x 7 mm was undiagnostic but was right on the corotid artery and
due to its small size, was hard to reach.
-nodule: 7 x 7 x 7 mm biopsy contained 10-15 groups of follicular cells and
findings were consistent with an adenomatoid nodule.
The endo has recommend follow up in 6 months for another ultrasound to monitor
growth.
My questions are these:
-Should I be concerned about the scant specimen of only 4 cell groups on the
biggest nodule?
-Should I get a second opinion on these results?
-Is the large size of the goiter with multiple nodules a good enough reason for
surgery even though it is benign? Its frustrating that since my levels are right
in the middle, that there isn't anything that can be done to shrink them.
I'm a little concerned considering the family history of thyroid cancer, so I
want to make sure that we are being smart about what we find.
Any advice/similar experience would be helpful. Thank you!