Objective18F-fluorocholine PET/CT is considered the imaging gold standard for detection of hyperfunctioning parathyroid glands . However, increased uptake might also occur in the thyroid gland. The aim of our study was to assess the incidence and significance of 18F-fluorocholine uptake in the thyroid gland in patients with hyperparathyroidism.Materials and methodsThis retrospective study includes 195 consecutive patients with hyperparathyroidism, who underwent 18F-fluorocholine PET/CT, for detection of hyperfunctioning parathyroid glands. PET/CT images were reviewed by two nuclear medicine physicians for the presence of focal or diffuse thyroid uptake. PET/CT results were compared with laboratory parameters, ultrasonography, EU-TIRADS classification in the presence of thyroid nodules, cytology, and final histology.Results25 patients (13%) showed 18F-fluorocholine uptake in the thyroid gland: focal thyroid uptake (FTU) in 7 patients (4%), diffuse thyroid uptake (DTU) in 8 patients (4%), and combined uptake (FTU + DTU) in 10 patients (5%), with a total of 20 active thyroid nodules. There was no correlation between EU-TIRADS classification and PET parameters. One highly 18F-fluorocholine active thyroid nodule and one isoactive thyroid nodule turned out to be papillary thyroid cancers in the final histology; 50% of the patients with DTU had Hashimoto’s thyroiditis.ConclusionIncidental 18F-fluorocholine uptake in the thyroid gland was observed in 13% of patients. As reported for 18F-FDG, focal 18F-fluorocholine uptake might represent thyroid cancer and should be evaluated with ultrasound and, if indicated, with fine-needle aspiration cytology. Diffuse 18F-fluorocholine uptake most likely represents multinodular goiter or Hashimoto’s thyroiditis.