Exp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes 2015; 123(01): 44-47
DOI: 10.1055/s-0034-1390491
Article
© J. A. Barth Verlag in Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Influence of Thyrotropin and Thyroid Volume on Basal Serum Calcitonin

Authors

  • G. Grani

    1   Department of Experimental Medicine, Unit of Endocrinology, “Sapienza” Università di Roma, Rome (RM), Italy
  • M. D’Alessandri

    1   Department of Experimental Medicine, Unit of Endocrinology, “Sapienza” Università di Roma, Rome (RM), Italy
  • M. Del Sordo

    1   Department of Experimental Medicine, Unit of Endocrinology, “Sapienza” Università di Roma, Rome (RM), Italy
  • G. Carbotta

    1   Department of Experimental Medicine, Unit of Endocrinology, “Sapienza” Università di Roma, Rome (RM), Italy
  • M. Vitale

    1   Department of Experimental Medicine, Unit of Endocrinology, “Sapienza” Università di Roma, Rome (RM), Italy
  • A Fumarola

    1   Department of Experimental Medicine, Unit of Endocrinology, “Sapienza” Università di Roma, Rome (RM), Italy
Further Information

Publication History

received 23 July 2014
first decision 23 July 2014

accepted 25 September 2014

Publication Date:
14 October 2014 (online)

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Abstract

Thyroid volume was found to be a determinant of serum calcitonin levels in animal models and in thyroid-healthy subjects, as recently reported. This study aims to evaluate if this finding is confirmed in patients undergoing ultrasonography-guided fine-needle aspiration cytology of suspicious thyroid nodules. A dataset of 561 patients including basal serum FT4, FT3, TSH, calcitonin, thyroid volume, anti-thyroperoxidase antibodies (TPOAb), and cytology report, was retrospectively analysed. The median thyroid volume was 20.5 ml (14.5–26.8) in males and 12.0 ml (9.3–17.0) in females (p<0.001). The overall median serum calcitonin value was 2.00 pg/ml (2.00–3.10). A Spearman’s correlation was performed between serum calcitonin levels and thyroid volume, showing a weak direct relationship (rs=0.173, p<0.001). This relationship is confirmed both in the smokers group (rs=0.337, p=0.003) and in non-smokers group (rs=0.115, p=0.012), and both in the TPOAb-positive patients (rs=0.419, p<0.001) and negative ones (rs=0.107, p=0.025). There is no correlation between serum TSH and calcitonin levels. In patients grouped according to morphologic diagnosis, calcitonin levels are slightly higher in the high-volume groups: the interquartile range was 2.00–2.00 pg/ml in the atrophy, 2.00–2.82 pg/ml in the normal volume, and 2.00–3.85 pg/ml in the goiter group (p=0.02). When males and females are computed separately, the statistical significance is lost. In conclusion, thyroid volume can mildly influence calcitonin levels. Gender acts as a “surrogate marker” of thyroid volume and the application of a gender-specific cut-off can probably overcome this issue in clinical practice.