Thyroid CancerTreatment Overview You may be shocked to find out that
you have
thyroid cancer. You may also feel angry, scared,
depressed, or anxious. There is no normal or right way
to
react to or cope with having cancer. Try to remember to take care of
yourself and to get help when you need it. The goal of treatment
for thyroid cancer is to get rid of the cancer cells in your body. How this is
done depends on your age, the
type
of thyroid cancer you have, the
stage of your cancer, and your general health. Most people have surgery to remove part or all of the thyroid gland.
Sometimes a suspicious lump or
nodule has to be surgically removed before you will
know if you have cancer or not. After surgery, you may need
treatment with radioactive iodine to destroy any remaining thyroid tissue. When
you no longer have all or part of your thyroid gland, you will probably need to
take thyroid hormone medicines for the rest of your life. These medicines
replace necessary hormones that are normally made by the thyroid gland and
prevent you from having
hypothyroidism—too little thyroid hormone. For more
information on hypothyroidism, see the topic
Hypothyroidism. Initial treatmentYour treatment for
thyroid cancer may include: - Surgery to remove the part of the
thyroid gland that contains cancer. Removing one part (lobe) is called a
lobectomy. Removing both lobes is called a thyroidectomy.
Lymph nodes may also be removed during
surgery.
- Radioactive iodine, which is used after surgery to
destroy any remaining thyroid tissue. After you have your thyroid surgically
removed, you may have to wait several weeks before having radioactive iodine
treatment to destroy any remaining thyroid tissue. During the waiting period,
you may have symptoms of hypothyroidism such as fatigue, weakness, weight gain,
depression, memory problems, or constipation. Your doctor may also put you on a
low-iodine diet before your treatment. If you are on a low-iodine diet, you
cannot eat foods that contain a lot of iodine, such as seafood and baked goods.
Depleting your body of iodine may make radioactive iodine treatment more
effective because your cells become "hungry" for iodine.
- Foods to avoid in a low-iodine diet
include milk and other dairy products, commercial baked products (including
most breads), seafood, and red food dye #3. A low-iodine diet is not the same
as a low-salt diet. Most salt in the United States and Canada has iodine added,
so low-iodine diets avoid iodized salt, but non-iodized salt is okay to eat.
- For more information, talk to your doctor or a registered
dietitian, or visit the National Institutes of Health's Web site at:
www.cc.nih.gov/ccc/patient_education/pepubs/lowio.pdf.
- Thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) suppression therapy.
TSH suppression therapy reduces the TSH in your body, which may help prevent
the growth of any remaining cancer cells.
- If thyroid cancer is
advanced when it is diagnosed, initial treatment may also include
chemotherapy or
radiation therapy.
Ongoing treatmentAfter treatment for
thyroid cancer, you may need to take
thyroid hormone medicine for the rest of your life to
replace the hormones that your body no longer makes. You will also need
follow-up visits with your doctor every 6 to 12 months. In addition to
scheduling regular visits, be sure to call your doctor if you notice another
lump in your neck or if you have trouble breathing or swallowing. At your follow-up visits, your doctor may order: - A blood test to measure your
thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) level. This test
helps your doctor know if you are taking the right amount of thyroid hormone
medicine.
- A blood test to measure your
thyroglobulin level. This test helps your doctor know
if your cancer has come back. Before this test, you may have to stop taking
your thyroid hormone medicine for several weeks. This can cause you to have
symptoms of
hypothyroidism such as fatigue, weakness, weight gain,
depression, memory problems, or constipation.
- Serum
calcitonin tests, if you had
medullary thyroid cancer (MTC).
- A
radioiodine scan to see if the cancer has come back or
spread to other parts of your body.
- Other imaging tests to look for signs of cancer, such as
ultrasounds,
X-rays,
CT scans and, in rare cases,
MRIs or
PET scans.
Treatment if the condition gets worseThyroid cancer may come back (recur). If thyroid
cancer does recur, it may be found during a physical exam, on an ultrasound, or
as a result of increasing
thyroglobulin levels. Unlike other types of recurrent
cancer, recurrent thyroid cancer is often cured, especially if it has spread
only to the
lymph nodes in the neck. Recurrent thyroid cancer or
thyroid cancer that has spread (metastasized) to other parts of the body is
treated with: Before you have a radioactive iodine scan to see if
cancer cells have spread (metastasized), you will need to either stop your
thyroid hormone replacement for a while or take Thyrogen.
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