Suppressive therapy of nontoxic goiter

Suppressive therapy of nontoxic goiter

Suppressive Therapy of Nontoxic Goiter KATSUTARO JOSEPH SHIMAOKA. E. SOKAL, In a double-blind study, 114 patients with clinically benign nontoxic ...

831KB Sizes 0 Downloads 62 Views

Suppressive Therapy of Nontoxic Goiter

KATSUTARO JOSEPH

SHIMAOKA.

E. SOKAL,

In a double-blind study, 114 patients with clinically benign nontoxic goiter were treated either with liothyronine (T3), 50 pg/day, or thyroxine (T4), 200 pg/day. After 12 weeks of therapy, patients whose goiters decreased in size were continued on the same therapy for an additional 16 weeks. Those who did not respond were randomly divided into two groups: in one group the same dose of the same medication was continued, and in the other twice the dose of their original medication was gfven. By the end of 26 weeks, 40 of 54 patients treated with T3 and 29 of 59 patients treated with T4 showed a significant decrease in goiter size. The difference in effectiveness of the two agents was statistically significant (p <0.025). Both T3 and T4 were effective in reducing small goiters, but T4 was relatively ineffective in shrinking large goiters. Duration of treatment, rather than dose of thyroid hormone, was the major determinant of goiter shrinkage. T3 produced a uniform and consistent depression of radioiodine uptake and circulating hormonal iodine levels, and was effective in shrinking both small and large thyroid nodules, whether or not radioiodine uptake was reduced to hypothyroid levels. T4 uniformly increased circulating hormonal iodine levels. However, in T4-treated patients who responded with regression of thyroid nodules, suppression of radioiodine uptake was substantially greater than in those who did not respond.

M.D

M.D.

Buffalo, New York

From the Department Memorial Institute, of Health, Buffalo, for reprints should ro

Shimaoka,

of Medicine,

Roswell

Park

New York State Department New York 14203. Requests be addressed to Dr. Katsuta-

Department

of

Medicine

B,

Roswell Buffalo,

Park Memorial Institute, 666 Elm Street, New York 14203. Manuscript accepted

January

31, 1974.

576

October

1974

The American

Therapeutic administration of thyroactive substances to patients with nontoxic goiter is quite old, antedating most of our knowledge of thyroid physiology. Despite gratifying results obtained in many cases, this form of treatment was largely abandoned several decades ago. As the concept of a thyropituitary axis became generally accepted, and the role of thyrotropic hormone (TSH) in the genesis of nontoxic goiter recognized, the interest in suppressive therapy revived. In 1953, Greer and Astwood [l] reviewed the earlier experience and reported their results in treatment of nontoxic goiter with thyroid preparations. They found that 38 of 50 patients with nontoxic goiter showed partial or complete regression of goiter during administration of desiccated thyroid, whereas only 6 of 40 control subjects showed spontaneous regression of their goiters. This study was subsequently expanded to 230 patients, with 68 per cent showing a response [ 21. Similar results were reported by Lamberg et al. [3]. Although material prepared from animal thyroid was used exclusively in the earlier studies, availability of synthetic thyroactive preparations has made it possible to evaluate the effectiveness of sodium l-thyroxine (T4) [4-71, sodium liothyronine (T3) [5-l I] and triiodothyroacetic acid (triac) [ 51. These agents induced significant reduction of goiter size in 39 to 100 per cent of treated patients. Although various groups have reported favorable results, others have

Journal of Medicine

Volume

57

SUPPRESSIVE

Suppressive

TABLE I

Therapy

of Goiter-Results

of Phase

THERAPY

OF NONTOXIC

GOITER-SHIMAOKA,

SOKAL

I (12 weeks) and Two Phases Combined (28 weeks)

Decrease 111Goiter Size Phase Medication

(no.)

I

No. - .

%

No.

%

(no.)

55 39

40 29 _.~

73 49

6 7

47

69

T3 T4

55 59

30 24

Total

114

54

_

~~~ ~~~

been pessimistic [ 12-151. Some believed quite strongly that medical treatment of nodular goiter is useless [ 151. Because of these conflicting views. we undertook a double-blind study in which the action of T3 was compared to that of a placebo [lo]. We found that a moderate dose of T3 for 12 weeks produced a measurable decrease in the size of goiter in about half of the patients. Although a spontaneous decrease in the size of goiter was observed in some of the patients treated with placebos, the difference in responses to T3 and to placebo was highly signifi-

_

increases erage

nodules

complete

ters were deemed were

examined

to be benign

geon and an internist. per measurements sible,

two

to the

sectional base

Each recorded

sets of base institution

area

Then,

T3 (50 pglday)

the location

of identifiable

of the gland.

nodules

were

The was

were

and T4 (200 pg/day)

and cali-

thyroid

Whenever

line measurements

patients

a sur-

recorded

significantly in one

randomly

treatment

groups.

other

group

pg/day

of T3,

phase vided

(phase

ratory

reports

third physician tored

the

pertinent (KS.),

study

closely

might require modification the study for thyroidectomy. al area

of thyroid

to thyroid

function.

who had access

nodules

and

examined

of therapy Changes were

However,

to all records, all patients

a

moniwho

or withdrawal from in the cross section-

expressed

II) lasted

into two equal

the other py,

or 400

as percentage

was

pglday

failed

to palas a

of the

same

into two groups:

continued, was

and

doubled

respectively.

All medications

one given

offered

in the

(i.e.,

to patients

100 This

were

in the morning

At the end of 28 weeks

was

sup-

had not decreased

of T4,

16 weeks.

in the evening.

thyroidectomy

dose

dose

doses,

diand

of thera-

whose

goiter

size had not regressed. However, patients whose goiters were clinically nonmalignant, and who were reluctant to undergo study

surgery,

were

of suppressive

termine

how frequently whose

accepted

therapy

goiter

suppressive were

withdrawn

supplementary herein)

might occur.

in size continued

therapy.

significant

a

response

regressed

showed

for

(not reported

delayed

Patients

growth

from

the

whose and

Pa-

to receive

during

study

to de-

thyroid

suppressive urged

to un-

dergo thyroidectomy. Twenty-four by column study

hour

thyroidal

determinations

and repeated

radioiodine

uptakes

and T4

at entry

into this

4, 12, 20 and 28 weeks

of sup-

were

after

at least once

tients were reexamined by the same physicians at 4 week intervals. The examining physicians did not have access to the records of their previous examinations or to the labo-

than

as a near-

recorded

randomly

dose

the suppressive

repeated

Pa-

on more

it was

goiters

divided

the same

pos-

to

20

When

to one examiner,

examiners

same

whose

in size were

group

therapy.

as the

assigned

both

the

Patients

pressive

cross

significant.

it was classified

observation,

to receive agent.

nod-

obtained

average

When

under

If the av-

exceeded

response.

pressive

They

physicians,

of treatment.

of thyroid

line size.

by two

(in two axes)

ules on a card with a diagram prior

on initial evaluation.

independently

considered

became.impalpable

response.

continued

therapy whose goi-

line size.

At the end of 12 weeks (phase I), patients who showed a significant reduction in the size of their thyroid masses

MATERIALS

patients

were

examinations,

the nodule

complete

the base

by two examiners

to one or both examiners

two consecutive pate

13 (11%)

from

obtained

or unmeasurable

long-term

to euthyroid

61

the changes

the thyroid

nodules

This study was restricted

-__-__.

or decreases

per cent,

tients

METHODS

-

of changes

cant (p
Complete and Near Complete Responders

Phases I & II

Thyroid

scan

during

obtained

was obtained suppressive

at entry

therapy

and

if there

was sufficient radioiodine uptake for scanning. There were 114 patients (106 female and 8 male) in this study

who

therapy. clinical

completed

Of these, evaluation),

fuse goiters

at least

71 patients

12 weeks

of suppressive

had uninodular

38 had multinodular

and one had a substernal

goiters

goiters, goiter.

(by

4 had dif-

As has been

found by others [ 171, single nodules were more frequent in the right lobe of the thyroid. Nineteen patients (17 per cent) current

had previously goiter.

undergone

Family

history

thyroidectomy regarding

and had re-

thyroid

disease

was positive in 24 cases (21 per cent). The mean age of these patients was 48.1 f 15.3 years with a range of 13 to

76 years.

Mean

duration

of goiter

was

6.2

f

11.1

years.

October 1974

The American Journal of Medicine

Volume 57

577

SUPPRESSIVE THERAPY OF NONTOXIC GOITER-SHIMAOKA,

TABLE

TABLE III

Suppressive Therapy of Goiter-Results During Phase II (16 weeks), Among Patients Who Did Not Respond in Phase I

II

Same T3 T4

(no.)

Double 13 T4

Not Available

Cold

Warm

Hot

Responders Nonresponders

5 4

19 6

3 0

7 2

6 3

Responders Nonresponders Corn bined

4 6

15 7

1 2

5 9

5 5

Responders Nonresponders ___

9 10

34 13

4 2

12 11

11 8

Total

19

47

6

23

19

T4

14 10

7 1

24

S (33%)

8 15

3 4

23

J (30%)

dose

I

Indeterminate*

Scan and

T3

0-Q

dose

Total

Correlation of Findings on Thyroid Response to Suppressive Therapy

Medication and Response

Decrease in Goiter Size

Patients Medrcatron

Tota

SOKAL

*The scans presented mottled areas creased function. Clinically observed identified in these scans.

of increased and denodules could not be

RESULTS

Of these 114 patients, 54 showed a significant decrease in the size of their thyroid nodules at the end of 12 weeks of suppressive therapy (Table I). The difference in response rate between the TS-treated and T4-treated groups was not statistically significant at this point. Among those who showed no response, six in the T3-treated group and five in the T6treated group showed an increase in goiter size. Nine of these patients (including the only patient in this study so far found to have thyroid cancer) accepted our recommendation and underwent thyroidectomy; in the remaining two patients suppressive therapy was continued and they subsequently showed significant shrinkage of their goiter. The combined results for both phases of suppressive therapy show that a decrease in goiter size was recorded among 73 per cent of the patients treated with T3 and 49 per cent of those treated with T4, during a half year of thyroid hormone administration. This difference in response rate is statistically TABLE IV

Correlation Between Goiter Size and Response to Suppressive Therapy Onginal Srze of Nodules 8.0 cm” or Less *

More Than 8.0 cm2

Responders Nonresponders

21 4

20 10

Responders Nonresponders Combined Responders Nonresponders

19 6

10 24

40 10

30 34

Medrcatron and Resporrse T3

T4

* Product

579

of two diameters,

October 1974

at right angles

to each

other.

The American Journal of Medicine

significant (p cO.025). In only one fifth of the patients who responded, however, did the thyroid nodules become unmeasurable during this time period. This is consistent with our previous experience [IO], which indicated that it is unrealistic to expect the thyroid nodules to disappear during a few months of suppressive therapy. Table II shows the results during phase II among patients whose goiters did not decrease during the first 12 weeks of suppressive therapy. One third of the patients in whom suppressive therapy was continued showed a significant shrinkage in the size of their goiter during this phase. Responses among the patients who continued to receive their original doses of thyroid hormone were just as frequent as among those whose dose was doubled. Thus, it appears that the duration of suppressive therapy is more important than the dose. Among those who did not respond to therapy, four patients showed a significant increase in goiter size. There was no difference in response to suppressive therapy, according to number and location of thyroid nodules, base line radioactive iodine uptake or base line serum hormonal iodine levels. Although the response rate was relatively poor among those who had had their goiters for more than 10 years (37 per cent), there was no consistent correlation between the duration of goiter and the response to suppressive therapy. “Cold” nodules responded somewhat less well than those which concentrated radioiodine (Table Ill); this difference was not statistically significant. All six patients with hot nodules showed more than 50 per cent suppression of radioiodine uptake during the study period. Patients with small goiters responded more frequently than those with large ones (Table IV). In pa-

Volume 57

SUPPRESSIVE THERAPY OF NONTOXIC GOITER-SHIMAOKA,

TABLE V

T4 by Column Determinations in Patients Receiving Suppressive Therapy

Medicationand Response

SerumHormonalIodine &g/100 BaseLine

PhaseI

TABLE VI

ml)

PhaseI I

Responders Nonresponders Combined

5.28i.0.27 5.88zt: 0.53 5.44&.0.25

2.91zt0.19 3.321 0.33 3.02AzO.17

2.21+0.14 2.78f 0.25 2.36+ 0.13

~~_~ T3 Responders Nonresponders Combined 14 Responders Nonresponders Combined -__ __ _.

Responders Nonresponders Combined

5.20+ 5.49A. 5.34+

7.1010.19 7.60% 0.23 7.35kO.15

7.79* 0.30 7.73i 0.21 7.761t0.19

T4

NOTE:

Values

given

0.27 0.18 0.16

are the mean

& standard

error.

NOTE:

tients with multinodular goiters in whom two or more nodules were measured, the respective cross sectional “areas” (product of two diameters, at right angles) were calculated and the sum of these was used as the size. When combined results for T3 and T4 therapy are analyzed, the patients whose goiters were smaller than 8.0 cm* responded more often than those whose goiters were larger than 8.0 cm* (p
TABLE VII

T4 By Column Determinations ~.__ ~~ ~_~

in Patients

24-Hour Radioiodine Uptake in Patients Receiving Suppressive Therapy Radioiodine Uptake (%)

Medication and Response

T3

Base Line

-... _

Valuesgiven

Phase

Phase II

I

31.1+ 26.5% 29.9 t

1.7 1.5 1.3

9.3 t 1.0 10.9 .i- 1.5 9.7 !- 0.8

27.0% 31.9+ 29.34:

2.2 2.2 1.6

6.5 l-O.7 14.9 im 1.5 10.8 t 1.0

~.

are the mean

I standard

9.3* 9.7+ 9.4xt

1.1 1.8 1.0

6.5& 0.9 11.1:+x 1.3 8.5+ 0.8 error.

tients treated with T4 (both responders and nonresponders) had a highly significant elevation in T4 by column values in phase I (p
Receiving Suppressive

Therapy

Serum Hormonal Base Line

Data

SOKAL

Iodine &g/100

Phase

ml)

I

Phase II

T3 Phase I nonresponders Same dose in phase II Double dose in phase II

5.41 ! 0.35 4.97 m!- 0.98

3.18 3.17

IZ 0.19 1: 0.46

2.86 2.27

+ 0.18 I: 0.36

Phase I nonresponders Same dose in phase II Double close in phase II

5.56 XI= 0.31 5.61-k 0.35

7.62 f 0.27 7.39 -t 0.24

7.74 8.17

!- 0.31 i_ 0.35

T4

NOTE:

Values

given

are the mean

:t standard

error.

October 1974

The American Journal of Medicine

Volume 57

579

SUPPRESSIVE THERAPY OF NONTOXIC GOITER-SHIMAOKA,

24-Hour Radioactive

TABLE VIII

SOKAL

Iodine Uptakes in Patients

Receiving Suppressive

Therapy

Radioiodine Uptake (%)

T3 Phase

28.6 i 27.0 t

1.7 2.9

10.0 f 9.8 f

1.4 2.4

30.2 f 30.8 f

3.1 3.5

13.6 f 2.3 13.3 + 2.2

12.5 f 2.1 4.8 f. 1.1

I nonresponders

Same dose in phase II Double dose in phase II NOTE: Values given are the mean *

standard

dose of T3 (p <0.025). Table IX shows the patterns

of suppression

of ra-

dioiodine uptake among responders and nonresponders. There was a significant correlation between the degree of suppression of radioiodine uptake and the decrease in goiter size (p
Correlation Between Suppression of Radioiodine Uptake and Clinical Response

Medication and Response T3 Responders Nonresponders T4 Responders Nonresponders Combined Responders Nonresponders Total

-

October 1974

Consistently 10% or more .____

Variable

12.1 f 9.0 f

2.4 1.5

error.

among the patients who took double doses. However, the only individual difference which was statistically significant was in the suppression of radioiodine uptake among the patients who received the double

580

Phase II

I nonresponders

Same dose in phase II Double dose in phase II T4 Phase

Phase I

Base Line

Data ~____~~~

Consistently below 10%

complete responses have been observed among patients who continued to receive suppressive therapy after completing phase II.) In six cases reduction of goiter size was recorded in phase I and regrowth of goiter was observed at a later date. In three of these patients, increase in nodule size was associated with softened consistency, and this was thought to be due to hemorrhage into the nodule or cystic degeneration. In two patients, regrowth of the nodule was associated with signs and symptoms highly suggestive of subacute thyroiditis. All these patients, however, showed shrinkage of their goiter again, during continued suppressive therapy. So far, 28 patients have undergone thyroidectomy (Table X). These were mostly nonresponders, but there were six responders. Two of the latter were symptomatic from their goiters; the other four had goiter of relatively short duration, were reluctant to commit themselves to a long-range program and expressed a preference for thyroidectomy. There was one case each of follicular carcinoma, subacute thyroiditis and Hashimoto’s disease. The patient with chronic thyroiditis showed a progressive increase in goiter size during 3 months of suppressive therapy. The remaining 25 patients had other benign lesions, including adenomas and nontoxic nodular goiters. Nine of these had associated cystic changes (36 per cent). In two patients an urticarial rash developed a few days after starting suppressive therapy. In both cases, the drug was T4, and the rash subsided promptly on discontinuing medication. One of these patients dropped out of the study, and the other was placed on a regimen of T3, without incident. All other patients were able to tolerate their assigned medication throughout the study period.

10 6

12 5

18 3

3 13

7 6

18 9

13 19

19 11

36 12

COMMENTS

32 (29%)

30 (27%)

48 (44%)

This study confirms therapy in reducing

The American Journal of Medicine

Volume 57

the effectiveness of suppressive the size of nontoxic goiters. Dur-

SUPPRESSIVE

TABLE X

Thyroid

Histology

Among Patients

Who Underwent

No. Patients

Cancer

THERAPY OF NONTOXIC GOITER-SHIMAOKA.

SOKAL

Thyroidectomy Iksociated

Medication

and Response

Thyroidltis

Other Lesions

Cystic

Changes

.

.--. _~_.. -.___ l

Responders T3 T4 Nonresponders T3 T4 Total _.-.-

-

Eight adenomas

ing the first

-.

_ --...

0 0

0

4

?

1

1

1

10 12

1 0

0 1

9 11

4 2

1

2

25*

9

- -____. ~. _._

28

..~. ~~__~______

and 17 “nontoxic

12 weeks

4 2

of therapy

nodular

_~~~~

goiters.”

54 (47 per cent) of

114 patients responded; after an additional 16 weeks of therapy 15 more responded, for a total of 69 patients (61 per cent) with a significant decrease in goiter size. In other reported studies also, patients who received longer treatment [2,3,7] appeared to do better than those who were treated for shorter periods [4,5]. It is clear that thyroid nodules cannot be expected to disappear during a brief trial of suppressive therapy; we saw only one complete response during the first 12 weeks. Our study indicates that suppressive therapy is more effective in shrinking smaller goiters than larger ones (Table IV), but this was principally due to resistance of the latter to T4 administration. Other investigators have stated that large diffuse goiters often fail to respond, but that this is not so in the case of nodular goiter [ 2,131. T3 therapy was significantly more effective than T4 therapy in inducing goiter regression in this study (p <0.025). The two thyroid hormones differ considerably in their metabolic behavior. Also, T3 is almost completely absorbed from the intestine whereas only one half of T4 is absorbed [ 181. We do not think that this would account for the difference in their effectiveness in this study. The initial doses arbitrarily chosen were 50 pglday for T3 and 200 yglday for T4. This dose difference is enough to compensate for the differences in molecular weight and absorption. Furthermore, randomization of the nonresponders during phase I was designed to examine the possibility of a dose-dependent response. During phase II, the decrease in goiter size among those who did not respond during phase I showed no correlation with the dose (TabI, II). As already stated, these results indicate that duration of treatment is more important than the dose of thyroid hormone; however, the kind of thyroid hormone administered may be important. Some of the differences between the action of T3 and T4 recorded in this study were quite unexpected. For example, T4 was considerably less effective in

October

patien?s with larger goiters than II; patients with smaller ones, whereas the response to T3 appeared to be virtually independent of goiter size (Table IV). Also, response to T4 clearly correlated with major suppression of thyroidal radioiodine uptake, whereas this seemed to be significantly less important for the action of T3 (Tables V and VI). These findings suggest a qualitative difference between the action of the two hormones. In addition, there appears to be a difference among patients in the action of T4. Responders and nonresponders to this agent had similar serum T4 levels (Table V) but widely divergent radioiodine uptakes (Table VI). Suppression of radioiodine uptake was greater in the responders to T4 than in the responders to T3 (Table VI). The nonresponders who received the double dose of T4 during phase II, and who had the highest serum T4 levels of any group in this study, showed less suppression of radioiodine uptake than the responders who received the lower dose, but this was not statistically significant. These differences cannot be due to failure to take medication or to impaired absorption of T4, since these would be reflected in lower serum T4 values. Others [2,13] have also commented on the poorer suppression of radioiodine uptake among nonresponders to desiccated thyroid. Such inconsistencies were not encountered among patients receiving T3. Responders and nonresponders who received the same dose of this drug had similar radioiodine uptake values (Table VI), and doubling the dose resulted in a substantial further decrease in radioiodine uptake. Circulating TSH levels of patients with nontoxic goiter are well within the normal range in the absence of severe iodine deficiency [ 19-2 11. TSH response to TRH administration is similar among normal subjects and patients with nontoxic goiter [ 221. However, TSH is believed to play an important role in the genesis and growth of such goiters [ 14,21,231. Administration of exogenous thyroid hormone can block TSH production and suppress its secretion

1974

The American

Journal of Medicine

Volume 57

581

SUPPRESSIVE THERAPY OF NONTOXIC GOITER-SHIMAOKA,

SOKAL

[ 24-271. There appear to be selective localization of T4 and T3, and active monodeiodination of T4 to T3 in the pituitary gland [ 28-3 11. Furthermore, the demonstration of specific T3-binding sites and the failure to find such binding sites for T4 in the pituitary of the rat are very interesting [32]. Various investigators have shown that significant conversion of T4 to T3 at the periphery takes place both in experimental animals and in man [33-381. It is tempting to speculate that conversion of T4 to T3 is somewhat impaired in some patients with nontoxic goiter. This would explain the difference in response to the two thyroid hormones. However, no evidence is presently available on this point. Our data provide indirect evidence that there might be some difference in TSH suppression by T4 among different patients (Table VI). However, even the nonresponders had substantial sup-

pression of radioiodine uptake. It is also possible that T3 or T4 might act directly on the goiter itself. However, this appears unlikely in the light of our current concepts of thyroid-pituitary relationships and the genesis of nontoxic goiter. Since T3 appears to be more uniformly effective in suppressing TSH secretion than T4, as is suggested by our data, it should be the agent of choice for suppressive therapy. ACKNOWLEDGMENT We gratefully acknowledge assistance given to this study by Drs. T. Chang, E. Ezdinli, H. Feliciano, P. Friedman, D. Holyoke, H. Karna, G. Koepf, F. Marchetta, J. Park, M. Razack, K. Sako, N. Silva, B. Thumasathit and S. Young.

REFERENCES

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7. 8.

9.

10.

11

12. 13.

14. 15. 16.

582

Greer MA, Astwood EB: Treatment of simple goiter with thyroid. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 13: 13 12. 1953. Astwood EB, Cassidy CE. Auerbach GD: Treatment of goiter and thyroid nodules with thyroid. JAMA 174: 459, 1960. Lamberg BA, Hernberg CA, Hakkila R: Treatment of nontoxic goiter with thyroid preparations. Acta Endocrinol 33: 584, 1960. Papper S, Burrows BA, lngbar SH, Sisson JH, Ross JF: Effects of l-thyroxine sodium on nontoxic goiter, on myxedema and on thyroid uptake of radioactive iodine. N Engl J Med 247: 897, 1952. Doniach D, Hudson RV, Trotter WR, Waddams A: Effect of thyroxine, triiodothyronine and triac on metabolic rate, blood lipids and thyroid size and function in subjects with nontoxic goiter. Clin Sci 17: 519, 1958. Horster FA, Reinwein D: Zur Struma-Behandlung mit Schilddrusen hormonen. Munch Med Wochenschr 110: 2822, 1968. Fawell WN. Catz B: Nontoxic goiter treatment with I-triiodothyronine and l-thyroxine. Calif Med 98: 197, 1962. Starr P, Goodwin W: Use of triiodothyronine for reduction of goiter and detection of thyroid cancer. Metabolism 7: 287, 1958. Schneeberg NG, Stahl TJ, Maldia G, Menduke H: Regression of goiter by whole thyroid or triiodothyronine. Metabolism II: 1054. 1962. Badillo J, Shimaoka K, Lessman EM, Marchetta FC, Sokal JE: Treatment of nontoxic goiter with sodium liothyronine. JAMA 184: 29, 1963. Sampson MC, Balls KF. Hydovitz JD, Rose E: Effect of levotriiodothyronine upon nontoxic goiter. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 16: 980, 1956. Beierwaltes WH, Johnson PC, Solari AJ: Clinical Use of Radio-isotopes, Philadelphia, W. B. Saunders Co., 1957. Glassford GH, Fowler EF, Cole WH: The treatment of nontoxic nodular goiter with desiccated thyroid. Results and evaluation. Surgery 58: 621, 1965. Spence AW: The aetiology, prevention and treatment of simple goiter. Postgrad Med J 36: 430, 1960. Stoffer RP, Welch JW, Hellwig CA, Chesky VE, McCusker EN: Nodular goiter. Arch Intern Med 106: 10, 1960. Reichlin S: Neuroendocrine-pituitary control, chap 8. The Thyroid (Werner SC, lngbar SH, eds), 3rd ed, New York,

October 1974

The American Journal of Medicine

17.

18. 19.

20. 21. 22.

23. 24.

25.

26.

27.

28.

29.

30.

Volume 57

Harper & Row, 1971. Psarras A, Papadopoulos SN, Livadas D, Pharmakiotis AD, Koutras DA: The single thyroid nodule. Br J Surg 59: 545, 1972. Hays MD: Absorption of triiodothyronine in man. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 30: 675, 1970. Pisarev MA, Utiger RD. Salvaneschi JP, Altschuler N, DeGroot LJ: Serum TSH and thyroxine in goitrous subjects in Argentina. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 30: 680, 1970. Cole YD Jr, Kohler PO: Plasma TSH levels in endemic goiter subjects. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 31: 220, 1970. Beckers C, Cornette C: TSH production rate in nontoxic goiter. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 32: 852, 1971. Beckers C, Maskens A, Cornette C: Thyrotropin response to synthetic thyrotropin releasing hormone in normal subjects and in patients with nontoxic goiter. Europ J Clin Invest 2: 220, 1972. Taylor S: Physiologic considerations in the genesis and management of nodular goiter. Am J Med 20: 698, 1956. Snyder PJ, Utiger RD: Inhibition of thyrotropin response to thyrotropin releasing hormone by small quantities of thyroid hormones. J Clin Invest 51: 2077, 1972. Vigneri R, Papalia D, Pezzino V, Squatrito S, Motta L, Polosa P: Triiodothyronine and thyrotropin releasing hormone interaction on TSH release in man. Hormones 3: 250, 1972. Bakke JL, Kammer H, Lawrence N: Effect of thyroid hormone on human pituitary thyroid stimulating hormone content. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 24: 28 1, 1964. Cotton GE, Gorman CA, Mayberry WE: Suppression of thyrotropin (h-TSH) in serums of patients with myxedema of varying etiology treated with thyroid hormones. N Engl J Med 285: 529, 1971. Ford DH. Gross J: The metabolism of l’3’-labeled thyroid hormones in the hypophysis and brain of the rabbit. Endocrinology 62: 416, 1958. Grinberg R, Volpert EM, Werner SC: In vivo deiodination of labeled l-thyroxine to 1-3:5:3’-triiodothyronine in mouse and human pituitaries. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 23: 140, 1963. Ford D, Kantounis S, Lawrence R: The localization of 1 i3’labeled triiodothyronine in the pituitary and brain of normal and thyroidectomized male rats. Endocrinology 64: 977, 1958.

SUPPRESSIVE THERAPY OF NONTOXIC GOITER-

31.

32.

33.

34.

35.

Reichlin S, Volpert EM, Werner SC: Hypothalamic influence on thyroxine monodeiodination by rat anterior pituitary gland. Endocrinology 78: 302, 1966. Schadlow AR, Surks MI, Schwartz HL, Oppenheimer JH: Specific triiodothyronine binding sites in the anterior pituitary of rat. Science 176: 1252, 1972. Braverman LE, lngbar SH, Sterling K: Conversion of thyroxine (T4) to triiodothyronine (T3) in athyreotic human subjects. J Clin Invest 49: 855, 1970. Sterling K, Brenner MA, Neuman ES: Conversion of thyroxine to triiodothyronine in normal human subjects. Science 169: 1099, 1970. Schwartz HL. Surks MI. Oppenheimer JH: Quantitation of

36.

37.

38.

October 1974

SHIMAOKA,

SOKAL

extrathyroidal conversion of l-thyroxine to 3,5.3’-triiodoI-thyronine in the rat. J Clin Invest 50: 1124, 197 1. Pittman CS, Chambers JB Jr, Read VH: The extrathyroidal conversion rate of thyroxine to triiodothyronine in normal man. J Clin Invest 50: 1187. 1971. Refetoff S, Matalon R, Bigazzi M: Metabolism of I-thyroxine (T4) and I-triiodothyronine(T3) by human fibroblasts in tissue culture. Evidence for cellular binding proteins and conversion of T4 to T3. Endocrinology 91: 934, 1972. Fisher DA, Chopra IJ, Dussault JH: Extrathyroidal conversion of thyroxine to triiodothyronine in sheep. Endocrinology 91: 1141, 1972.

The American Journal of Medicine

Volume 57

583