New-generation thyroglobulin assay: performance and implications for follow-up of differentiated thyroid carcinoma

2014 
OBJECTIVES: Differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) requires long-term follow-up by serum thyroglobulin assay and cervical ultrasound, due to the risk of recurrence. Guidelines recommend basal assay under hormone therapy at 3 months, repeated at 6-12 months post-surgery, with or without associated isotopic ablation, after stimulation by recombinant human TSH to improve assay sensitivity. It was hypothesized that a new-generation assay kit with lower limits of detection and quantification would improve the sensitivity of the basal assay, enhance detection of premature recurrence and decrease the rate of false-negatives, thereby avoiding the need for the complementary stimulation test. MATERIAL AND METHODS: A validation study of the second-generation thyroglobulin serum assay was performed in the laboratory of the Lyon Sud Hospital Centre (Lyon, France), with comparison to stimulation test results. Low-concentration serum pools were constituted, including patients followed for stage I to III DTC for whom basal and post-stimulation samples were available in the serum bank. RESULTS: The new assay proved robust and reliable, with good correlation with the technique presently used in the Lyon hospitals. None of the 54 patients showed false-negative results, which was the objective of our choice of threshold, and 5 were false-positive, for thyroglobulin thresholds of 0.1mug/L at baseline and 1.0mug/L post-stimulation. Positive and negative predictive values were 100% and 87.8% respectively. CONCLUSION: These results allow an improvement in the follow-up algorithm for DTC, replacing the stimulation test by the new-generation thyroglobulin assay in post-therapeutic assessment.
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