Treatment Overview
Your treatment will depend on how
your
thyroid nodule affects you. If your thyroid nodule is
not cancerous (benign) and is not causing any problems, your doctor will watch
the nodule closely before doing anything else. If your thyroid nodule is
causing problems, you may need to take medicine or have surgery.
Antithyroid medicine and radioactive iodine can treat benign nodules that
are causing your thyroid gland to make too many hormones (hyperthyroidism). For more information on
hyperthyroidism, see the topic
Hyperthyroidism.
Surgery is usually only
necessary if your thyroid nodule is so large that it causes problems with
breathing or swallowing or if your nodule is cancerous. After a cancerous
nodule is surgically removed, you may need radioactive iodine to destroy any
thyroid tissue or cancer cells that are still causing problems. If you need to
have your entire thyroid gland removed, you will need to take thyroid hormone
medicine for the rest of your life.
For information about thyroid
cancer and its treatment, see the topic
Thyroid Cancer.
Initial treatment
When you know you have a
thyroid nodule, your treatment options include:
- Observation. If your
thyroid nodule is not cancerous, your doctor may choose to check it every 6 to
12 months for changes in size. Many noncancerous thyroid nodules stay the same
size or shrink without treatment.
- Thyroid biopsy. Your doctor may drain a fluid-filled nodule with a needle. Some
fluid-filled nodules will not come back after they are drained, but most do
come back.
- Surgery (thyroidectomy).
Not all thyroid nodules need surgery. You will need to have surgery to remove
part or all of your thyroid gland if:
- Your nodule is cancerous or suspected to
be cancerous.
- Your nodule is so big that it makes it hard for you
to breathe or swallow.
- You have a fluid-filled nodule that returns
after being drained one or two times.
- Thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) suppression therapy may be used to shrink a nodule if:
- Your thyroid nodule is not cancerous, but
is large or growing, or if you have a goiter and multiple
nodules.
- Your thyroid nodule is cancerous or suspected to be
cancerous, and you are not healthy enough to have surgery.
- Radioactive iodine. Radioactive iodine
may be used to destroy thyroid tissue if:
- Your nodule is noncancerous but is making
too much thyroid hormone, causing
hyperthyroidism. If you have hyperthyroidism because
of your nodule and you are pregnant, it is not a good idea to have radioactive
iodine treatment. Your doctor will recommend surgery instead of radioactive
iodine.
- You have several nodules (multinodular
goiter) and surgery is not a good idea because of
other health problems you have. Radioactive iodine can shrink nodules that
cause problems with breathing or swallowing, but your nodules may come back
after treatment.
Ongoing treatment
If your doctor is observing your
thyroid nodule and there is no change in it, he or she
may just continue to watch the nodule. If the nodule changes in size or in
other ways, your doctor may do another
thyroid biopsy and blood tests for
thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH). Or your doctor may
perform surgery (thyroidectomy) to remove the nodule.
If
part or all of your thyroid gland needs to be surgically removed because of
cancer,
radioactive iodine may be used to destroy any thyroid
tissue or cancer cells that remain after surgery. Your doctor may also
recommend
thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) suppression therapy
to prevent thyroid nodules from coming back.
If you have a thyroid
nodule:
- Take any thyroid hormone medicine your doctor
prescribes at the same time each day and do not miss a dose.
- Follow your doctor's advice for getting your blood checked for
thyroid level.
- Call your doctor if you have symptoms of
hyperthyroidism, such as feeling nervous, having a
fast heartbeat, sweating more than usual, and losing weight. Sometimes
hyperthyroidism develops from taking thyroid hormone medicine or when a
noncancerous nodule starts making too much thyroid hormone.
- Call
your doctor if you have symptoms of
hypothyroidism, such as feeling tired, feeling cold
when others do not, and gaining weight. Hypothyroidism can develop after you
are treated with radioactive iodine or you have surgery.
- Schedule regular checkups with your doctor. Even noncancerous
nodules need to be looked at by your doctor on a regular basis.
Treatment if the condition gets worse
If your
thyroid nodule gets bigger, your doctor may recommend
another
thyroid biopsy to see whether the nodule has become
cancerous. If your nodule has become cancerous or appears to be cancerous, your
doctor will probably recommend surgery (thyroidectomy)
to remove some or all of your thyroid gland. You may also need
thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) suppression therapy
and/or
radioactive iodine.
What To Think About
It is not clear how well
thyroid-stimulating hormone suppression therapy works to shrink noncancerous
thyroid nodules. If you have a noncancerous nodule, talk to your doctor about
whether TSH suppression therapy is right for you.
TSH suppression
therapy can raise your risk of heart and bone problems, especially if you have
heart disease or
osteoporosis. If you have heart disease, this kind of
medicine can make chest pain or problems with your heart rhythm worse. It can
also raise your chances of
heart attack. If you have osteoporosis, TSH
suppression therapy can further weaken your bones.
Surgery is the
best treatment for cancerous thyroid nodules. If you have a suspicious nodule,
you can often wait a while to have surgery because most thyroid cancers grow
and spread very slowly. If you choose to delay surgery, your doctor will need
to closely watch your nodule.