# Prolonged Normal Thyroid Function After 131I Radioiodine Therapy Using a Minute LT3 Suppression Test (LT3s-RIT) in Patients with Thyroid Unifocal Autonomy and Baseline Detectable TSH

**Authors:** Jérôme Clerc, Paul Bodin-Cufi, Louise Giraud, Aurélie Forbes, Emmanuelle Laroche-Masse, Lionel Groussin Rouiller, Louis Schubert, Yvan Mouraeff, Kawtar Hilmy, Anne-Ségolène Cottereau, Eve Piekarski

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm14217871 · 2025-11-06

## TL;DR

A new method using low-dose thyroid hormone before radioiodine treatment helps most patients with thyroid autonomy maintain normal thyroid function long-term.

## Contribution

LT3-induced TSH suppression during 131I-RIT preserves euthyroidism in UFA patients with SCH G1, avoiding hypothyroidism.

## Key findings

- 93% of patients maintained normal thyroid function after 88 months.
- LT3 suppression reduced extra-nodular radiation dose without adverse effects.
- Low 131I doses achieved effective treatment with minimal hypothyroidism.

## Abstract

Background: Subclinical hyperthyroidism grade 1 (SCH G1, TSH > 0.1 mU/L) is common in patients with thyroid unifocal autonomy (UFA) and associated with cardiovascular risks and increased mortality. While 131I radioiodine therapy (131I-RIT) effectively treats UFA, it frequently induces hypothyroidism, partly due to extra-nodular absorbed dose (AD) enhanced by residual TSH stimulation. Objective: We hypothesized that short-term LT3-induced TSH suppression at the time of RIT would promote long-term euthyroidism. Patients and Methods: A retrospective study was conducted on 95 UFA patients with SCH G1 (2001–2024). Patients underwent baseline and post-LT3 thyroid scintigraphy, and then received 131I-RIT with individualized dosimetry. Long-term bioclinical follow-up was achieved. Results: Short-term low-dose LT3 suppression caused no adverse events and significantly reduced TSH (0.45 to 0.047 mU/L). Whole-gland 123I uptake decreased moderately (11.0 to 8.4%), while extra-nodular lobe uptake dropped markedly (1.77 to 0.73%) (all p < 0.0001). This focused activity on the UFA (2.5-fold increase), maintaining mean UFA AD (about 260 Gy) but reducing extra-nodular AD (61 to 37 Gy, p < 0.0001). Despite low 131I doses (mean 181 MBq), a dose–response relationship was observed: higher AD correlated with greater nodular lobe volume reduction (p < 0.033). At the 88-month follow-up, 93% of patients achieved normal thyroid function; one had persistent SCH G1, two were borderline hypothyroid, and two required LT4. Conclusions: 131I-RIT under brief LT3-induced TSH suppression induces sustained euthyroidism in SCH G1 with UFA. This simple, low-risk strategy reduces radioprotection concerns and is under evaluation to determine cardiovascular benefits.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** LT3 (PubChem CID 5920), 131I (PubChem CID 5489939), 123I (PubChem CID 135300), LT4 (PubChem CID 5819)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** nodular lobe volume reduction (MESH:D008224), Thyroid Unifocal Autonomy (MESH:D013966), TSH suppression (MESH:D007037), SCH G1 (MESH:D006980)
- **Chemicals:** 123I (MESH:C000614958), Radioiodine (MESH:C000614965), LT3 (MESH:D014284)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12609194/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12609194