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Thyroid cancer
{{{Name|Thyroid cancer}}}
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| ICD-10
| C73
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| ICD-O:
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| ICD-9
| 193
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| OMIM
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| MedlinePlus
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| eMedicine
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| DiseasesDB
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Thyroid cancer is cancerof the thyroidgland. There are four forms: papillary, follicular, medullary and anaplastic. The most common forms (papillary and follicular) are fairly benign, and the medullary form also has a good prognosis; the anaplastic form is fast-growing and poorly responsive to therapy.
Masses of the thyroid are diagnosed by fine needle aspiration(FNA) or frequently by thyroidectomy(surgical removal and subsequent pathological examination). As the thyroid concentrates iodine, radioactive iodineis a commonly used modality in thyroid carcinomas.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- 1 Symptoms
- 2 Diagnosis
- 3 Classification
- 3.1 Papillary thyroid cancer
- 3.1.1 Pathology
- 3.1.2 Prognostic indicators
- 3.1.3 Surgical treatment
- 3.2 Follicular thyroid cancer
- 3.2.1 Surgical Treatment
- 3.2.2 Hurthle cell variant
- 3.3 Medullary thyroid cancer
- 3.4 Anaplastic thyroid cancer
- 3.4.1 Treatment
- 3.4.1.1 Post-operative radiotherapy for differentiated thyroid carcinoma: when and how much
- 3.4.1.2 Adjuvant therapy for medullary thyroid cancer
- 3.4.1.3 Adjuvant therapy for anaplastic thyroid cancer
- 4 References
- 5 External links
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Symptoms
Most often the first symptom of thyroid cancer is a nodule in the thyroid region of the neck, but only 4% of these nodules are malignant. Sometimes the first sign is an enlarged lymph node. Other symptoms that can be present are pain, changes in voice and symptoms of hypo- or hyperthyroidism.
Diagnosis
After a nodule is found during a physical examination, thyroid function is investigated by measuring, among other markers, Thyroid Stimulating hormone(TSH), the thyroid hormones thyroxine(T4) and triiodothyronine(T3), and Thyroid Binding Globulin(TBG). Tests for serum thyroid autoantibodiesare also sometimes done. The blood assays are usually accompanied by ultrasoundimaging of the nodule to determine the position, size and texture. Most clinicians will also request technetiumand/or radioactive iodineimagingof the thyroid. The most cost-effective, sensitive and accurate test to determine whether the nodule is malignant is the fine needle biopsy, which is almost always done. Often, the suspected nodule is removed surgically for pathological examination, or a biopsy is done using a coarse needle, so that the arrangement of the cells can be examined (where the fine needle biopsy can only give individual cells).
Classification
Thyroid cancers can be classified according to their pathological characteristics. The following variants can be distinguished:
- Papillarythyroid cancer (75%, incl. mixed papillary/follicular)
- Follicularthyroid cancer (16%)
- Medullarythyroid cancer (5%)
- Anaplasticthyroid cancer (3%)
- Lymphoma(1%)
- Squamous cell carcinoma, sarcoma(0.5 - 2%)
Papillary thyroid cancer
This is the most common type of thyroid cancer. It occurs more frequently in women and presents in the 30-40 year age group. It is also the predominant cancer type in children with thyroid cancer, and in patients with thyroid cancer who have had previous radiation to the head and neck (in this group, the cancer tends to be multifocalwith early lymphatic spread, and portends a poor prognosis). Thyroglobulincan be used as a tumor markerfor well-differentiatedpapillary thyroid cancer.
Pathology
- Characteristic Orphan Annie eyenuclear inclusions and psammomabodies on light microscopy
- Lymphatic spread is more common than hematogenous spread
- Multifocality is common
- The so-called Lateral Aberrant Thyroidis actually lymph node metastasis from papillary thyroid carcinoma.
Prognostic indicators
- AGES - Age, Grade, Extent of disease, Size
- AMES - Age, Metastasis, Extent of disease, Size
- MACIS - Metastasis, Age at presentation, Completeness of surgical resection, Invasion (extrathyroidal), Size (this is a modification of the AGES system)
- TNM- Tumor, node, metastasis
Surgical treatment
- Minimal disease - hemithyroidectomy(or unilateral lobectomy) and isthmectomyis sufficient
- Gross disease - total thyroidectomy
Arguments for total thyroidectomy are:
- Reduced risk of recurrence
- Papillary carcinoma is a multifocal disease (hemithyroidectomy may leave disease in the other lobe)
- Ease of monitoring with thyroglobulin (sensitivity for picking up recurrence is increased in presence of total thyroidectomy)
- Ease of detection of metastatic disease with thyroid scans
Follicular thyroid cancer
This occurs more commonly in women of over 50 years old. Thyroglobulin can be used as a tumor marker for well-differentiated follicular thyroid cancer.
Surgical Treatment
- Unilateral hemithyroidectomy is uncommon due to the aggressive nature of this form of thyroid cancer.
- Total thyroidectomy is almost automatic with this diagnosis. This is invariably followed by radioiodinetreatment at levels from 100 to 200 millicuries. Occasionally treatment must be repeated if annual scans indicate remaining tissue.
- Annual thyroid scans consist of withdrawal from thyroxine medication and/or injection of recombinant human Thyroid Stimulating Hormone (TSH). Low dose radioiodine of a few millicuries is administered. Full body nuclear medicinescan follows using a gamma camera.
- Recombinant human TSH, commercial name Thyrogen, is produced in cell culture from genetically engineered hamstercells.
Hurthle cellvariant
This type of thyroid cancer is a variant of follicular cell carcinoma with some exceptions
- They are more often bilateral and multifocal
- They are more likely to metastasize to lymph nodes than follicular carcinoma
- Management - like follicular carcinoma, unilateral hemithyroidectomy is performed for non-invasive disease, and total thyroidectomy for invasive disease
Medullary thyroid cancer
This form of thyroid carcinoma originates from the parafollicular cells (C cells), which produce the hormone calcitonin. While the increased calcitonin itself is probably not harmful, it is useful as a marker which can be tested in blood.
Its prognosis is poorer than that of follicular and papillary thyroid cancer. In a proportion, the cancer runs in families, both in isolated form or as part of the syndrome of multiple endocrine neoplasia(MEN).
Anaplastic thyroid cancer
This form of thyroid cancer has a very poor prognosis (near 100% mortality) due to its aggressive behavior and resistance to cancer treatments. It rapidly invades surrounding tissues (such as the trachea).
Treatment
Unlike its counterparts, anaplastic thyroid cancer is not curable by surgery, and is in fact usually unresectable due to its high propensity for invading surrounding tissues. Treatment consists of radiation therapyusually combined with chemotherapy.
Post-operative radiotherapy for differentiated thyroid carcinoma: when and how much
The role of external beam radiotherapy(EBRT) in thyroid cancer remains controversial and there is no level I evidence to recommend it. No published randomised controlled trials have examined the addition of EBRT to standard treatment, namely surgery, radioactive iodineand medical suppression of thyroid stimulating hormone.
Imbalances in age, sex, completeness of surgical excision, histological type and stage, between patients receiving and not receiving EBRT, confound retrospective studies. Variability also exists between treatment and non-treatment groups in the use of radio-iodine and post-treatment thyroid stimulating hormone(TSH) suppression and treatment techniques between and within retrospective studies.
Farahati et al. and Philips et al. have reported statistically significant advantages for post operative EBRT, however, in both studies many confounding factors have been reported. For example, patients receiving EBRT were more likely to have node-positive disease, extracapsular extension and incomplete macroscopic excision. The differences in patient groups among these studies, and the difficulties with confounding factors, make evidence-based recommendations for the use of EBRT difficult to formulate. Tsang et al. have suggested a role for EBRT in patients with papillary cancer, with microscopic residual disease based on sub-group analysis showing a statistically significant advantage in terms of cause-specific survival (100% vs 95%; P=0.038) and local recurrence (93% vs 78%; P=0.01). Farahati et al. recommend the use of EBRT in node-positive patients over 40 years of age with papillary histology on the basis of an increase in time to local or distant failure (P=0.0009). Other indications for EBRT include high-grade tumours that do not concentrate iodine and tumours with gross local invasion where there is a high suspicion of microscopic or macroscopic residual disease.
The use of EBRT is controversial for those patients with microscopic residual disease. All reports on the use of EBRT have been retrospective, with varying criteria for patient selection, resulting in contradictory conclusions. Several studies have described either no or deleterious effects for EBRT, but many others have described benefit. In a study from Toronto, Brierley et al. found superior local control and improved survival in patients who received EBRT for microscopic residual disease (10-year local relapse-free rate 93% compared with 83% for patients not receiving EBRT, P = 0.01; and cause-specific survival 99% compared with 93%; P = 0.04).
?Total thyroidectomy with adjuvant 131I, followed by TSH suppression is considered standard therapy for differentiated thyroid carcinoma?. In the absence of randomised data, there is credible evidence from retrospective studies (Level II-III) to recommend EBRT in addition to standard therapy in high-risk patients.
The apparent difference in outcomes related to the dose of radiotherapy is subject to the confounding factors in all retrospective studies of EBRT as outlined above. However, there are few published data that define the dose to be used. In one retrospective study, 114 patients with macroscopically resected, well-differentiated thyroid cancer were treated with EBRT and an ?adequate? total dose was defined as >45 Gy. Patients receiving an ?adequate? dose had a significantly improved local regional relapse-free survival (P<0.001). However, only three of the 114 patients in this study also received radio-iodine, and therefore the role of EBRT in addition to standard management was not examined. A total dose of 50?60 Gy was used in the two studies, which showed a reduction in local failure where EBRT was used in addition to radio-iodine (Farahatti et al., and Phillip et al.). Others have treated patients with gross residual disease with 50 Gy in 20 fractions or its equivalent and 40 Gy in 15 fractions or its equivalent in the presence of microscopic residual disease. If the decision is made to treat a large volume, including the cervical nodes for instance, or if there is extracapsular extension and local invasion of cervical nodes, fractionation is changed to 2 Gy fractions. Currently, recommended doses are 50 to 60 Gy in 25 to 30 fractions over 5 to 6 weeks.
To treat the thyroid bed, a clinical target volume from the hyoid to suprasternal notch is determined. A simple technique is to use two antero-lateral oblique wedged fields, or direct electron beams. When using oblique fields the posterior border is placed to exclude the spinal cord. If it is determined that the clinical target volume should include the cervical and superior mediastinal lymph nodes, as well as the thyroid bed, a two-phase technique is commonly used. The initial volume (phase I) includes the regional lymph nodes from the mastoid tip to the carina, including the thyroid bed. The phase I volume may consist of parallel opposing antero-posterior/postero-anterior fields to 40?46 Gy. The phase II volume should include the tissues considered at highest risk of relapse, aiming to boost the high-risk area to a total dose of 14 Gy (cumulative total dose of 60 Gy). For the boost to the thyroid bed alone, several techniques can used, such as, a direct anterior electron beam, antero-lateral oblique wedge fields, or a lateral pair of angled-down oblique fields, achieved with a couch rotation of 10?20 degrees, aiming inferiorly to avoid the shoulders, off the spinal cord. Since the thyroid bed target volume is wrapped around many critical structures in the neck and it is often necessary to include regional lymph nodes, treatment planning of this difficult volume is ideal for conformal radiotherapy, or intensity-modulated radiation therapy. A conformal plan may be used either to treat the thyroid bed alone or to include the cervical nodes.
Recommended indications for the use of EBRT are:
- High Grade tumors that do not concentrate radio-iodine.
- Recommendations for EBRT after 131I therapy include high-risk patients defined as; older (>45 years) with potential microscopic residual disease, after resection of gross extrathyroid extension (i.e. UICC 6th edition category T4a or T4b but not T3), or multiple lymph-node involvement.
- Bulky tumors with superior mediastinal / retro-sternal extension.
- Gross evidence of local invasion at surgery and presumed to have significant macro or microscopic residual disease, particularly if there is residual tumour that fails to concentrate 131I and is apparent only by raised thyroglobulin.
- For locally advanced tumors which are inoperable for a variety of lesions it can be used for palliation along with TSH suppression.
- For recurrent disease in the neck which is not amenable to radio-iodine therapy or further surgery.
- For palliation of recurrent disease or metastatic disease in bone, cerebrum, spine and other areas.
Adjuvant therapy for medullary thyroid cancer
Unlike differentiated thyroid carcinoma, there is no role for radioiodine treatment in medullary-type disease. External beam radiotherapy should be considered for patients at high risk of regional recurrence, even after optimum surgical treatment. Brierley et al., conducted a retrospective study of the treatment given to patients with microscopic residual disease, extraglandular invasion, or lymph-node metastases and found the locoregional relapse-free rate at 10 years was 86%, compared with 52% for those patients who did not receive adjuvant therapy. Typically, 40 Gy is given in 20 fractions to the cervical, supraclavicular, and upper mediastinal lymph nodes for 4 weeks, with subsequent booster doses of 10 Gy in five fractions to the thyroid bed, especially in the setting of gross residual disease.
Adjuvant therapy for anaplastic thyroid cancer
Treatment of anaplastic-type carcinoma is generally palliative in its intent for a disease that is rarely cured and almost always fatal. The median survival from diagnosis ranges from 3 to 7 months, with worse prognosis associated with large tumours, distant metastases, acute obstructive symptoms, and leucocytosis. Death is attributable to upper airway obstruction and suffocation in half of patients, and to a combination of complications of local and distant disease, or therapy, or both in the remainder. In the absence of extracervical or unresectable disease, surgical excision should be followed by adjuvant radiotherapy. In the 18?24% of patients whose tumour seems both confined to the neck and grossly resectable, complete surgical resection followed by adjuvant radiotherapy and chemotherapy could yield a 75?80% survival at 2 years.
References
| Author=Bennedbæk F.N.; Perrild H.; Hegedüs L.
| Title=Diagnosis and treatment of the solitary thyroid nodule. Results of a European survey
| Journal=Clinical Endocrinology
| Year=1999
| Volume=50
| Issue=3
| Pages=357–363}}
| Author=Carlo Ravetto, Luigia Colombo, Massimo E. Dottorini
| Title=Usefulness of fine-needle aspiration in the diagnosis of thyroid carcinoma
| Journal=Cancer Cytopathology
| Year=2000
| Volume=90
| Issue=6
| Pages=357–363}}
External links
- Thyroid Cancer Survivors' Association, Inc.
- Thry'vors: Canadian Thyroid Cancer Support Group
| Tumors (and related structures), Cancer, and Oncology
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| Benign- Premalignant- Carcinoma in situ- Malignant
Topography: Anus- Bladder- Bone- Brain- Breast- Cervix- Colon/rectum- Duodenum- Endometrium- Esophagus- Eye- Gallbladder- Head/Neck- Liver- Larynx- Lung- Mouth- Pancreas- Penis- Prostate- Kidney- Ovaries- Skin- Stomach- Testicles- Thyroid
Morphology: Papilloma/carcinoma- Adenoma/adenocarcinoma- Soft tissue sarcoma- Melanoma- Fibroma/fibrosarcoma- Lipoma/liposarcoma- Leiomyoma/leiomyosarcoma- Rhabdomyoma/rhabdomyosarcoma- Mesothelioma- Angioma/angiosarcoma- Osteoma/osteosarcoma- Chondroma/chondrosarcoma- Glioma- Lymphoma/leukemia
Treatment: Chemotherapy- Radiation therapy- Immunotherapy- Experimental cancer treatment
Related structures: Cyst- Dysplasia- Hamartoma- Neoplasia- Nodule- Polyp- Pseudocyst
Misc: Tumor suppressor genes/oncogenes- Staging/grading- Carcinogenesis/metastasis- Carcinogen- Research- Paraneoplastic phenomenon- ICD-O- List of oncology-related terms
| de:Schilddrüsenkrebs
it:Tumori della tiroide
pt:Tumor da tiróide
fi:Kilpirauhassyöpä
sv:Thyroideacancer
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thyroid+cancer Wikipedia article Thyroid cancer.
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