International Journal of Otolaryngology and Head & Neck Surgery, 2019, 8, 217-270
https://www.scirp.org/journal/ijohns
ISSN Online: 2168-5460
ISSN Print: 2168-5452
Thyroid Cancer
Rodrigo Arrangoiz* , Fernando Cordera, David Caba, Eduardo Moreno,
Enrique Luque-de-Leon, Manuel Muñoz
Sociedad Quirúrgica S.C., American British Cowdray Medical Center, Mexico City, Mexico
How to cite this paper: Arrangoiz, R.,
Cordera, F., Caba, D., Moreno, E., Luque-deLeon, E. and Muñoz, M. (2019) Thyroid Cancer. International Journal of Otolaryngology and Head & Neck Surgery, 8, 217-270.
https://doi.org/10.4236/ijohns.2019.86024
Received: October 15, 2019
Accepted: November 11, 2019
Published: November 14, 2019
Copyright © 2019 by author(s) and
Scientific Research Publishing Inc.
This work is licensed under the Creative
Commons Attribution International
License (CC BY 4.0).
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Open Access
Abstract
Thyroid tumors include those that originate from follicular cells and those
that arise from parafollicular cells (C cells). Differentiated thyroid cancer, which
originates from follicular cells, includes papillary carcinoma, follicular carcinoma, oncocytic cell carcinoma (Hürthle), poorly differentiated carcinoma,
and anaplastic carcinoma. The incidence of thyroid cancer has been increasing significantly, with an estimated incidence in the United States of America
of 53,990 cases by the year 2018. This neoplasm is listed as the most common
endocrine tumor and represents approximately 3% of all malignant tumors in
humans, with 75% of cases occurring in women, and two-thirds of cases occurring in people under 55 years. The increase in the prevalence/incidence of
low-risk thyroid cancer over the last 10 to 20 years has required a re-appraisal
of the standard one-size-fits-all approach to differentiated thyroid cancer. This
adaptation to a more individualized management of the patient with thyroid
cancer has led to a much more risk-adapted approach to the diagnosis, initial
therapy, adjuvant therapy, and follow-up of patients with differentiated thyroid cancer. This paper with review the current understanding of the clinical
presentation, diagnostic workup, and management of thyroid cancer centered
on evidence-based and personalized medicine.
Keywords
Thyroid Nodules, Thyroid Cancer, Thyroid FNA, Thyroid Nodule Workup,
Thyroid Cancer Treatment, Molecular Studies for Thyroid Cancer
1. Introduction
Thyroid nodules are a major public health problem. Epidemiological studies
have shown that the prevalence of palpable thyroid nodules is approximately 5%
in women and 1% in men living in parts of the world with sufficient iodine [1]
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[1] [2] [3] [4]. In contrast, high-resolution neck and thyroid ultrasound can detect
thyroid nodules in approximately 19% to 68% of randomly selected people, with
higher frequencies in women and the elderly [3] [4]. The clinical importance of
thyroid nodules lies in the need to exclude thyroid cancer, which occurs between
7% and 15% of cases, depending on age, sex, radiation exposure history, family
history, among other factors [5] [6].
Thyroid neoplasms include those that originate from follicular cells and those
that arise from parafollicular cells (C cells). Differentiated thyroid cancer, which
originates from follicular cells, includes papillary carcinoma, follicular carcinoma, oncocytic cell carcinoma (Hürthle), poorly differentiated carcinoma, and
anaplastic carcinoma. These thyroid tumors comprise the vast majority (more
than 90% of cases) of all thyroid cancers [7]. Of these subtypes, anaplastic carcinoma is rare and is characterized by its extremely poor prognosis. Similarly,
poorly differentiated carcinoma is characterized by its aggressive behavior and
its unfavorable prognosis. Between 2010 and 2014, 63,229 patients per year were
diagnosed with thyroid carcinoma. Of these 63,229 patients, 89.4% had papillary
carcinoma, 4.6% had follicular carcinoma, 2.0% had oncocytic cell carcinoma,
1.7% had medullary carcinoma, and 0.8% had anaplastic carcinoma [8].
The incidence of thyroid cancer has been increasing significantly since the
mid-1990s, with an estimated incidence in the United States of America of 53,990
cases by the year 2018 [9]. This cancer is listed as the most common endocrine
neoplasm and represents approximately 3% of all malignant tumors in humans,
with 75% of cases occurring in women [9] [10], and two-thirds of cases occurring in people under 55 years [9]. Less aggressive forms of these tumors are
more common in women and younger people [8]. The thyroid cancer mortality
rate has remained stable in women but has increased by approximately 1% per
year since 1983 in men and will be responsible for approximately 2060 deaths in
2018 [9]. The relatively low mortality rate compared to the incidence is due, in
part, to the indolent nature of the vast majority of thyroid tumors. Patients with
differentiated thyroid cancer generally have an excellent long-term prognosis,
with five-year survival rates close to 100% for localized disease [8]. Despite the
low mortality rates, local recurrence occurs in approximately 20% of patients,
and distant metastases occur in about 10% of patients 10 years after diagnosis
[11]. Mortality from thyroid cancer has been increasing in the last 18 years [8],
which is why progress in the development of new systemic therapies for thyroid
cancer refractory to iodine is extremely important. We know that medical development in this field has been delayed compared to the progress observed in
the treatment of other solid tumors, however, data from emerging clinical studies suggest that thyroid cancer can be treated with targeted agents, particularly
kinase inhibitors, with promising results that overshadow those previously seen
with cytotoxic agents [12].
The annual incidence of thyroid cancer has almost tripled from 4.9 cases per
100,000 people in 1975 to 14.3 cases per 100,000 people in 2009 [13]. Almost all
of the change has been attributed to an increase in the incidence of papillary
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thyroid cancer [8] [9] [13]. 25% of new thyroid tumors diagnosed between 1988
and 1989 were equal to or less than 1 cm in diameter compared to 39% of new
thyroid tumors diagnosed between 2008 to 2009 [13]. This may be due to the increasing use of high-resolution neck ultrasound and other diagnostic imaging
techniques leading to finding asymptomatic thyroid lesions (incidentalomas),
trends that are changing the initial treatment and follow-up of many patients
with thyroid cancer [14].
The detection and diagnosis of differentiated thyroid cancer has evolved over
the years with increased use of high-resolution neck and thyroid ultrasound, fine
needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB), molecular tests, and thyroglobulin as a serum
marker. This evolution has led to greater controversy regarding the appropriate
medical and surgical management of this cancer. The type of surgical resection
(lobectomy vs. total thyroidectomy), the role of lymphadenectomy (central prophylactic vs. therapeutic compartment), and adjuvant medical treatment for differentiated thyroid cancer are currently debated and present unique challenges in
the treatment of these patients.
2. Risk Factors
In-depth knowledge of the risk factors that may predispose to developing thyroid cancer is required when a patient is being assessed with complaints related to
the thyroid gland such as thyroid nodules, voice changes, or symptoms of dyspnea, dysphagia, or sensation of suffocation These risk factors include a personal
or family history of thyroid cancer, certain diseases with a genetic predilection
towards the development of thyroid cancer, and previous radiation exposure.
Most thyroid cancers are idiopathic. However, the thyroid gland is very sensitive
to radiation-induced oncogenesis, and radiation is the main environmental cause
of thyroid cancer [15] [16] [17].
Personal history of exposure to ionizing radiation represents approximately
9% of all cases of thyroid cancer, and the risk is inversely related to the age at
which the exposure was suffered, but directly related to the radiation dose, increasing linearly to a dose of 20 Gy [16] [18] [19]. Studies evaluating the effects
of accident radiation exposure at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant have found
a 5 to 6-fold increase in the incidence of thyroid cancer among people who lived
in the Chernobyl area and were under 18 years at the time of the accident [10]
[16]. When thyroid cancer develops as a result of exposure to ionizing radiation,
it is invariably of the papillary type and behaves similarly to sporadic thyroid
papillary cancer, although the evidence we have as a result of the Chernobyl
nuclear disaster suggests that Radiation dose may be related to the aggressiveness or differentiation of thyroid cancer [16]. Children exposed to the Chernobyl
disaster had a higher proportion of thyroid tumors that were less well differentiated and of the papillary subtype of solid variant than patients who had no history of radiation exposure [16]. The type of radiation, along with the radiation
dose, has been associated with the aggressiveness of thyroid cancer [18]. DifferDOI: 10.4236/ijohns.2019.86024
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ent forms of radiation have been linked to different genetic alterations associated
with thyroid cancer, resulting in variable aggressiveness. Therefore, radiation
exposure plays a critical role in the development of thyroid cancer, especially in
patients younger than 15 years, and can play a role in its aggressiveness based on
acquired genetic alterations and radiation dose [16] [18] [19] [20].
Having a personal history of thyroid cancer increases the risk of developing
subsequent or recurrent thyroid tumors substantially. Most differentiated thyroid cancers are sporadic, and at least 5% of these patients will have family disease [21]. There is evidence of a family predisposition, with several inherited
syndromes that demonstrate an increased risk of developing thyroid cancer. The
mechanisms underlying these associations are not well known. Certain histological subtypes of thyroid cancer should raise the suspicion of family syndromes that have a genetic predisposition to develop said cancer. As for example, the cribriform-morular variant of papillary thyroid cancer is associated
with familial adenomatous polyposis and should raise concerns about a germline mutation of the APC gene and a predisposition to colon and rectum cancer
[22]. Familial adenomatous polyposis has been associated with the development
of all different subtypes of differentiated thyroid cancer [23] [24]. Families related to familial adenomatous polyposis with cases of thyroid cancer should begin surveillance/screening at age 15, or earlier if family members are affected at
younger ages [22] [23] [24] [25].
The Carney complex is a rare genetic condition associated with mutations in
the PRKAR1A gene that manifests with skin pigmentation, myxomas, schwannomas and thyroid abnormalities, including differentiated thyroid cancer [26].
Cowden syndrome is caused by a mutation in the PTEN germ line and is associated with the development of benign and malignant breast and thyroid lesions
[27]. Peutz-Jeghers syndrome is due to germline defects in STK11 (LKB1) and is
associated with gastrointestinal hamartomatous polyps, pigmented mucocutaneous lesions, and differentiated thyroid cancer [28].
During the last decade, significant advances have been made in the identification of genes related to the pathogenesis of thyroid cancer. Studies of the patterns of genetic alterations present in thyroid tumors suggest that there are differences in the pathogenesis of different types of thyroid tumors, which probably
explains the variable range of biological behavior observed among thyroid cancers [29] [30] [31]. The initial event in the development of papillary thyroid
cancer is usually the result of the accumulation of several mutations [30]. In approximately 50% of cases, a constitutive activation of the BRAF kinase, a member of the Ras/MAPK pathway, is present and is the result of a V600E amino acid substitution [32]. BRAF normally depends on the activation of Ras to propagate the extracellular signal transduction. In certain scenarios, activation of the
Ras oncogene (found before BRAF) has also been implicated as an initiating
event in papillary thyroid cancer, as well as in follicular thyroid cancer [32]. Somatic mutations have been found in the Ras oncogene in benign and malignant
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thyroid tumors, and therefore appear to be an early event in thyroid tumorigenesis [30] [31]. Some studies suggest that Ras mutations are more prevalent in
follicular thyroid carcinomas, in the follicular variant of papillary thyroid cancer,
and in follicular adenomas [32]. Ras mutations may result in allelic loss or in
chromosomal rearrangements that lead to an increase in thyroid follicular cancer formation rates [32]. Chromosomal rearrangements have also been observed
in the formation of RET/PTC oncogenes and imply an unfavorable prognosis
[33]. There are variable data regarding the usefulness of BRAF, TP53 and TERT
mutations tests in risk stratification of patients with thyroid cancer [34] [35].
BRAF V600E mutations have been associated with worse results in papillary thyroid cancer, with higher recurrence and death rates [35].
Thyroid cancers are highly vascularized and elevated levels of vascular endothelial growth factor have been identified in these tumors, suggesting that angiogenic pathways may be a potential target for treatment [29]. In addition, during
the past 30 years, thyroid cancers have been shown to be associated with genetic
mutations that lead to aberrant intracellular signaling (Table 1). Preclinical and
clinical data suggest that inhibition of intracellular signaling cascades, including
mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate 3-kinase (PI3K) pathways may be effective in cancer treatment of thyroid
[7] [33] [36] [37] [38] [39] [40]. RET kinase activation by a germline mutation is
associated with the development of familial medullary thyroid cancer. Similar mutations have been detected in somatic cells that produce greater RAS/RAF activation in approximately 50% of sporadic thyroid medullary cancers [41] [42]. MAPK
activation in papillary thyroid cancers can occur through RET/PTC translocations
or mutations in RAS or BRAF [32]. The PI3K pathway is also activated by mutations in PAX8/PPARγ in follicular thyroid cancers [43]. This greater understanding of the mutations involved in thyroid tumorigenesis will likely lead to new
systemic therapies for the treatment of advanced disease.
Table 1. Prevalence of mutations in different pathological subtypes of thyroid cancer.
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Type of Thyroid Cancer
Mutation
Prevalence (%)
Papillary
BRAF V600E
RET/PTC
Copy gain PI3KCA
RAS
PI3KCA
Copy gain BRAF
PTEN
45
20
12
10
3
3
2
Follicular
RAS
PAX8/PPARγ
Copy gain BRAF
Copy gain PI3KCA
PTEN
PI3KCA
45
35
35
12
<10
<10
Medullary
RET (hereditary)
RET (sporadic)
>95
50
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The RET proto-oncogene is a tyrosine kinase receptor that is primarily expressed in tumors of neural crest/neuroectoderm origin, which explains the high
incidence of these mutations in medullary thyroid carcinomas that originate in
para-follicular cells (C cells) [44]. The RET gene is found on chromosome 10
and germline mutations produce activating mutations that change direction
that are responsible for 95% of hereditary medullary thyroid carcinomas, including those associated with multiple endocrine neoplasia 2A (Sipple syndrome )
and 2B (Wagenmann-Froboese syndrome) and familial medullary thyroid cancer [44] [45]. In 80% of cases of medullary thyroid carcinoma, the disease is sporadic, without an inherited etiology, but a somatic mutation is identified in the
RET gene in 40% to 70% of these sporadic cases [41] [42]. In these sporadic cases, mutations are found most frequently in codon 918 that results in the constitutive activation of the RET tyrosine kinase receptor [46]. Almost all patients
with multiple endocrine neoplasia 2A or multiple endocrine neoplasia 2B that is
transmitted in an autosomal dominant manner will develop medullary thyroid
cancer and the detection of germline RET gene mutations has been of great value in the early identification of patients who have a genetic basis for their disease. Even in patients with sporadic medullary thyroid cancer, 6% to 10% of
these patients will have a mutation in the RET proto-oncogene germline, which
reveals a new family of patients with previously undiagnosed medullary thyroid
cancer [41] [42] [45]. The discovery of the RET proto-oncogene has had a significant clinical impact, which affects the scrutiny and prophylactic treatment of patients who are members of the families of patients with multiple endocrine neoplasia or with familial medullary thyroid carcinoma [47].
Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma develops from the dedifferentiation of thyroid
tumors, although the specific reason for this transformation has not been well
clarified. Mutations in the p53 suppressor gene are frequently found in anaplastic thyroid carcinoma and are absent in well-differentiated thyroid neoplasms
[48] [49]. This observation suggests that p53 mutations play a role later in the
pathogenesis of the thyroid tumor, specifically, in the transition from dedifferentiation to the anaplastic phenotype. A large number of mutations in other
pathways, including the PI3K/Akt and Ras/MAPK pathways have also been implicated in the formation of ATC [48] [49].
3. Pathology
As previously mentioned papillary, follicular, oxytic, medullary, and anaplastic
thyroid cancer constitute the vast majority of all thyroid tumors (90%) and the
remaining proportion represents lymphoma, squamous cell carcinoma, sarcoma,
melanoma or metastatic disease (breast cancer, renal cell cancer, lung cancer,
colon/rectal cancer, and gastric carcinomas) [8] [50]. Papillary and follicular
thyroid cancer are broadly classified as differentiated thyroid tumors but can
be subclassified based on their histological appearance or biological behavior
(Table 2).
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Table 2. Pathological classification of malignant thyroid tumors [8] [50].
Subtype
Histologic Variants
Incidence
Papillary (89.4%)
Conventional/Classic
Follicular Variant
Tall Cell
Solid
Diffuse sclerosing
Papillary Micro-Carcinoma
Oncocytic
Columnar Cell
Clear Cell
Morular Cribriforme
Marco-follicular
Papillary with HobnailCharateristics
Papillarywith stroma similar to fascitis
Combined Papillary and Medullary Carcinoma
Papillary with dedifferentiation to Anaplastic Carcinoma
65% - 85%
15% - 20%
5% - 10%
1% - 3%
1% - 2%
Follicular (4.6%)
Hurthle (2.0%)
Poorly Differentiated
Insular
Medullary (1.7%)
Anaplastic (0.8%)
Lymphoma
Squamous Cell Carcinoma
Sarcoma
Melanoma
Metastatic Tumors
Others
Papillary thyroid cancer accounts for approximately, based on the most recent
statistics, 89.4% of all thyroid malignancies and is the predominant histology
observed in patients exposed to radiation [8] [15] [16] [17] [18]. The average age
of diagnosis is between 30 and 40 years and women are affected more frequently
than men (2:1 ratio) [13] [51] [52]. The macroscopic appearance of papillary
thyroid cancer can be very variable. Most tumors tend to be markedly circumscribed, solid, firm, and white in color, but a significant percentage of tumors
can be cystic [50]. It is not uncommon to have a solid primary tumor with cystic
metastases to a lymph node [50]. Papillary thyroid cancer may have a pattern of
infiltrating growth in the thyroid or may show a direct extra extra-thyroid extension to adjacent tissues [51] [52]. Unlike normal thyroid gland or benign
thyroid lesions that protrude on sectioning, papillary thyroid cancer remains flat
[53]. The diagnosis is made by microscopic evaluation and can be made on the
basis of a fine needle biopsy (FNAB) [34] [53].
Conventional papillary thyroid cancer shows a papillary architecture with ramifications [51] [52]. The papillae are covered by cells with eosinophilic cytoplasm and with enlarged nuclei [50] [52]. Cell polarity may be abnormal or completely lost in some tumors [50]. In some cases, squamous metaplasia may be
present [50]. Psamoma bodies that are concentric lamellar calcifications composed in part of thyroglobulin are more common in some variants of papillary
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thyroid cancer [50] [51] [53]. These psamoma bodies are present in 50% of cases
and help ensure the diagnosis of papillary cancer [53]. Some tumors may also
contain multinucleated giant cells [50].
The definitive diagnosis is made on the basis of cellular and nuclear characteristics (cytological characteristics) with cells that adopt a cuboidal form with nuclear “grooving” and cytoplasmic inclusions [50] [51] [52] [53]. These characteristic findings are described as the pathognomonic nuclei of “Orphan Annie” [53].
Papillary cancer is characterized by multifocality in 18% to 85% of patients and
is associated with an increased risk of lymph node metastasis [53]-[61]. Metastases to cervical lymph nodes are quite common in patients with papillary cancer
at the time of diagnosis, with a frequency that varies between 30% to 80% in
some series [53] [62] [63] [64]. Despite this high incidence, the 10-year survival
rate remains 95% [8].
Follicular cancer represents the second most frequent thyroid cancer, approximately 4.6% of all thyroid cancers [8]. These tumors are most frequently found
in geographic areas with iodine deficiency and, like papillary cancer, have a female predominance with a ratio of 3:1 (women/men) [8] [65] [66] [67]. Follicular cancer tends to occur in an older population compared to other differentiated
thyroid tumors. Its maximum incidence is between the ages of 40 and 60, compared to the incidence of papillary cancer that reaches an earlier peak (usually 10
years less), between the ages of 30 to 50 years [53] [67]. Follicular cancer is often
found in association with benign thyroid disorders, such as endemic goiter, and
a relationship between chronic stimulation with thyroid stimulating hormone
(TSH) and follicular carcinoma due to the increased incidence of follicular cancer has been suggested in areas with iodine deficiency [65] [66]. Patients generally present with a clinical history of a solitary thyroid nodule, which has often
rapidly increased in size [53].
The histopathology of follicular tumors varies from a normal epithelium, well
differentiated tumors with a follicular and colloid differentiation (findings associated with a good prognosis) to poorly differentiated tumors with solid growth,
absence of follicles, marked nuclear atypia and vascular and/or capsular invasion
(characteristics that are associated with a worse prognosis) [68]. Follicular tumors
are usually unifocal, well encapsulated, containing highly cellular follicles, and
are easily confused with benign follicular adenomas in BAAF [53]. The pathological diagnosis of this malignant neoplasm can only be made by permanent
cuts, demonstrating the presence of capsular and/or vascular invasion [53].
In follicular tumors the micro-follicular architecture is uniform with a collection of cuboidal cells that cover the follicles. In addition, features compatible
with papillary cancer, such as psamoma bodies and nuclear changes (such as the
appearance of frosted glass, longitudinal grooves, nuclear overlap and inclusions), must be absent [50] [52] [69] [70]. Follicular thyroid tumors are classified into one of three groups according to the type and degree of invasion [68]
[69] [71]:
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• Minimally invasive follicular thyroid cancer, which demonstrates only the
invasion of the tumor capsule without vascular invasion (low-risk tumor according to the guidelines of the American Thyroid Association [ATA])
(Table 3);
• Encapsulated angioinvasive follicular thyroid cancer, which demonstrates
minor vascular invasion (≤4 foci of angioinvasion within the tumor or tumor
capsule) with or without capsular invasion (low-risk ATA tumor) (Table 3);
• Widely invasive follicular thyroid cancer, which is characterized by:
o Wide invasion of the tumor capsule;
o A multinodular tumor without a well-defined capsule that invades the normal thyroid surrounding the tumor; and/or
o Extensive vascular invasion (>4 foci of angioinvasion) (high-risk ATA tumor) (Table 3).
Regional metastasis to cervical lymph nodes is somewhat rare in follicular
cancer, being present in 5% to 13% of cases in the initial presentation [53] [72].
Distance dissemination is more common in the initial presentation compared to
papillary cancer and is observed in 10% to 33% of patients, most often it presents
with hematological dissemination to the lungs or bone (lytic lesions) even in
those with small primary tumors, although tumors smaller than 2 cm in size
have not been associated with metastatic disease [73]. The 10-year survival rates
for follicular thyroid cancer are 70% to 95%, slightly worse than those for papillary cancer, possibly due to late presentation and the presence of distant metastases in the initial diagnosis.
Hürthle cell carcinoma (also known as oncocytes, or Askanasy cells), although
Table 3. ATA risk stratification system to estimate the risk of persistent/recurrent disease.
Low Risk
Papillary thyroid cancer with all of the following:
• No local or distant metastases
• All the macroscopic tumor has been resected (R0)
• No invasion of local and regional tissues
• The tumor does not have an aggressive histology (aggressive
histology’s include high-cell, insular tumors, columnar cell
carcinoma, Hürthle cell carcinoma, follicular thyroid cancer,
Hobnail variant)
• Without vascular invasion
• There is no uptake of I-131 outside the thyroid bed in the
post-treatment examination
• Clinical N0 or ≤5 pathological micro-metastases;
N1 (<0.2 cm in the largest dimension)
• Well-differentiated, encapsulated intra-thyroid follicular
cancer
• Well-differentiated intra-thyroid follicular thyroid cancer
with capsular invasion and zero or minimal vascular
invasion (<4 foci)
• Intra-thyroid, unifocal or multifocal papillary
micro-carcinoma, including mutated BRAF V600E (if known)
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Intermediate Risk
Any of the following present:
• Microscopic invasion of peri-thyroid
soft tissues
• Cervical ganglionic metastases or avid
I-131 metastatic foci in the neck on
post-treatment examination after
thyroid bed ablation
• Tumor with aggressive histology or
vascular invasion (aggressive histologies
include high cell tumors, columnar,
insular cell carcinoma, Hürthle cell
carcinoma, follicular thyroid cancer,
Hobnail variant)
• Clinical N1 or >5 pathological N1 with
all affected lymph nodes < 3 cm in the
largest dimension
• Multifocal papillary thyroid
micro-carcinoma with extra thyroid
extension and BRAF V600E mutation
(if known)
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High Risk
Any of the following present:
• Macroscopic tumor invasion
• Incomplete tumor resection
with macroscopic residual
disease
• Remote metastasis
• Postoperative serum
thyroglobulin suggestive of
distant metastases
• Pathological N1 with any
metastatic lymph node ≥ 3 cm
in the largest dimension
• Follicular thyroid cancer with
extensive vascular invasion
(>4 foci of vascular invasion)
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considered a variant of follicular cancer, deserves a separate discussion since it
comprises 2% of all thyroid neoplasms and has a biological behavior and a natural history that distinguishes them from follicular cancer [8] [53] [74]. These
tumors are formed by sheets of polygonal and hyperchromatic cells that contain
abundant mitochondria [74]. Hürthle tumors are characterized by the presence
of a cell population of “oncocytes”, mostly eosinophilic oxyphilic cells with abundant cytoplasm, very compact mitochondria and round oval nuclei with prominent nucleoli [74]. Like follicular cancer, Hürthle carcinoma requires a definitive pathological study to identify vascular or capsular invasion [53] [72]. Unlike
follicular cancer, Hürthle carcinomas are often multifocal (30%), have regional
lymph node metastases (25%), and often fail to concentrate radioactive iodine
[53]. In part, due to these factors, patients with Hürthle carcinoma have higher
tumor recurrence rates and lower survival rates compared to patients with papillary or follicular carcinomas [53].
Medullary thyroid carcinoma is a neuroendocrine tumor of the parafollicular
cells or C cells of the thyroid gland [75]. Approximately 1.7% of thyroid neoplasms are medullary carcinomas [8] [75]. Although most cases are sporadic, 15%
to 25% of cases are part of an autosomal dominant hereditary syndrome [75].
Calcitonin production is a characteristic feature of this tumor [53]. C cells originate in the embryonic neural crest; As a result, medullary carcinomas often have
the clinical and histological features of other neuroendocrine tumors such as
carcinoid tumors and pancreatic islet cell tumors.
The sporadic form of medullary thyroid cancer typically presents as a unilateral solitary nodule (75% to 95% of patients) in the fifth decade of life [76] [77]
[78] [79]. Family forms, such as multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN 2A), multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN 2B) and familial spinal cancer, occur in the fourth
decade and are typically multifocal [76] [77] [78] [79]. Due to the embryological
origin of medullary thyroid cancer (C cells), these tumors are located in the upper poles of the thyroid gland where these cells reside [53]. It is believed that the
presence of C cell hyperplasia is an omen for the development of hereditary
spinal cancer [53] [76] [77] [78] [79]. These tumors are not encapsulated, nor
well defined, and consist of a heterogeneous mixture of fusiform or round cells
[53] [76] [77] [78] [79]. The cells are separated by fibrous septa and amyloid, the
latter of which helps in the diagnosis of spinal cancer by immunohistochemical
staining for calcitonin and carcinoembryonic antigen [53]. Although these tumors grow slowly, they have a tendency to metastasize early, usually before the
primary tumor has reached 2 cm [53].
Approximately 50% to 70% of patients with medullary thyroid cancer have
clinically detectable cervical lymph node involvement at the time of diagnosis
[53] [76], about 15% percent have symptoms of compression or invasion of the
upper aerodigestive tract, such as dysphagia or hoarseness, and approximately
5% to 10% have distant metastatic disease [75] [80] [81]. The survival of patients
with medullary thyroid cancer is between that of differentiated thyroid cancers
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and undifferentiated (anaplastic) thyroid cancers. When the disease is limited to
the thyroid gland, the 10-year survival rate is 90% compared to patients with distant metastatic disease that has a 10-year survival of only 20% [81].
Anaplastic thyroid tumors are undifferentiated tumors of the thyroid follicular epithelium representing less than 1% of all malignant thyroid tumors [82].
These neoplasms are highly aggressive and are considered one of the most lethal
malignancies, with a mortality close to 100% [82] [83]. It is believed that these
tumors arise from well differentiated thyroid tumors, but over time they suffer
from dedifferentiation [81] [84]. Because activating mutations of the BRAF and
RAS genes are observed in both well-differentiated thyroid malignancies and in
anaplastic thyroid cancer, it is suspected that these are early events in the pathway of this disease [85]. Late events in disease progression that are most commonly seen in anaplastic cancer compared to well-differentiated tumors include
mutations in the p53 tumor suppressor protein [86] [87] [88] [89], 16p [90], catenin (cadherin-associated protein), beta 1, and PIK3CA [91].
The annual incidence of anaplastic cancer is approximately one to two cases
per million people and represents between 0.8% and 9.8% of all thyroid cancers
worldwide [82] [92] [93] [94] [95]. Patients with anaplastic cancer are generally
older at the time of diagnosis than those with differentiated cancer; The average
age at diagnosis is 65 years, and less than 10% of patients are under 50 years [96]
[97]. The vast majority of patients with anaplastic thyroid cancer (60% to 70%)
are women [96] [97]. About 20% of patients with anaplastic thyroid cancer have
a history of differentiated thyroid cancer, and 20% to 30% of patients have synchronous differentiated cancer [98] [99] [100] [101] [102]. The vast majority of
synchronous thyroid tumors are papillary carcinomasbut coexisting follicular
tumors have also been identified. Approximately 10% of patients with Hürthle
cell thyroid tumors have foci of anaplastic cancer within Hürthle cell cancer
[103].
Patients with anaplastic thyroid carcinoma usually manifest clinically with a
rapidly growing tumor and symptoms of dysphagia, dysphonia, or dyspnea secondary to extrinsic compression of the tumor that is often fixed to adjacent
structures [53]. However, regional or distant metastases are evident at the time
of diagnosis in 90% of cases [101] [103] [104] [105]. Regional extension sites
may include peri-thyroid fat and pre-thyroid muscles, lymph nodes, larynx, trachea, esophagus, tonsils, large neck vessels, and the mediastinum [101]. Metastatic disease at diagnosis is found in 15% to 50% of cases [98] [99] [100] [102].
The most common site of distant metastases is the lungs (up to 90% of cases)
[99] [100]. These metastases are usually massive intrapulmonary lesions, but
there may be pleural involvement. About 5% to 15% of patients have bone metastases [98] [99] [100] [102]. 5% of patients have brain metastases, and some
have metastases in the skin, liver, kidneys, pancreas, heart and adrenal glands
[99] [100] [101] [106] [107] [108] [109] [110].
The tumor is not encapsulated and often contains areas of necrosis that may
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sure diagnosis and rule out possible lymphoma [53]. Cells are characteristically
large and multinucleated with nuclear polymorphism and high mitotic activity
[99]. Surgery rarely has a role in this disease; the most common procedures performed are isthmusectomy or cytoreduction to alleviate tracheal compression
[81]. In rare cases that anaplastic carcinoma is diagnosed in the intrathyroid
stage, without a coexisting well differentiated thyroid cancer component, thyroid
lobectomy with wide margins of adjacent soft tissue on the side of the tumor is
an appropriate surgical management [98]. If the anaplastic tumor is very small
and completely confined to the thyroid, total thyroidectomy with complete tumor resection does not prolong survival compared to ipsilateral thyroid lobectomy and if it is associated with a higher complication rate [100] [102]. However,
some experts prefer total or near total thyroidectomy with dissection of the central and lateral lymph nodes of the neck [111]. The reason for this is that differentiated thyroid cancer and anaplastic thyroid cancer often coexist, and total
thyroidectomy offers a greater chance of complete resection [111]. For patients
with small intra-thyroid anaplastic tumors associated with a differentiated thyroid cancer, total thyroidectomy is recommended, if complete macroscopic resection and minimal morbidity can be performed, to facilitate subsequent treatment of differentiated cancer [111].
Anaplastic thyroid cancers are extremely aggressive, with a specific mortality
close to 100%. The average survival ranges from three to seven months, and the
one and five year survival rates, are 20% to 35% percent and 5% to 14%, respectively [101] [102] [105] [112] [113] [114], with 90% of patients dying of the disease within 6 months of diagnosis, usually secondary to local progression [81].
Primary thyroid lymphoma is a rare diagnosis, but it should always be considered in the differential diagnosis of patients with thyroid nodules, goiter, and
carcinomas, mainly because their prognosis and treatment differ substantially
from other disorders. Lymphomas of the thyroid gland typically manifest in the
seventh decade of life (the median and median age is between 65 and 75 years),
affect women more commonly than men (with a female 4:1 predominance), and
are often associated with a history of Hashimoto’s thyroiditis [115]-[120]. They
represent less than 2% of all thyroid neoplasms and often present as a rapidly
growing tumor with symptoms of dysphagia and dysphonia, possibly confusing
the diagnosis with anaplastic thyroid carcinoma [121]. In a Danish epidemiological survey, the annual incidence rate was estimated at 2.1 cases per million
people [115]. Pre-existing chronic autoimmune thyroiditis (Hashimoto’s disease)
is the only known risk factor for primary thyroid lymphoma and is present in
approximately half of patients [122]. Among patients with Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, the risk of thyroid lymphoma is at least 60 times higher than in patients
without thyroiditis [115] [119] [120].
Thyroid lymphoma can be primary or secondary, they are almost always nonHodgkin (B-cells), since thyroid Hodgkin lymphoma is extremely rare [115] [118]
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roid gland. Occasional cases of T lymphocyte lymphomas have been described,
often in endemic areas for adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma associated with lymphotropic virus-T (HTLV)-I [123] [124]. Sixty percent to 80% of thyroid lymphomas are diffuse large B-cells of the germinal center type [116] [117] [118]
[125] [126]. The second most common subtype (about 30% of cases) is lymphoma of the extra-ganglion marginal marginal zone [32]. Other less common
histological subtypes include follicular lymphomas; Small extra lymph node
lymphomas have also been described [32]. Extra-lymph node marginal lymphomas of the type of mucous-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) are generally
associated with Hashimoto’s thyroiditis [127].
Histologically, the cells are monomorphic and stain positively for lymphocyte
markers such as CD20 [81]. Tumors of MALT origin generally have a better
prognosis and can often be treated with radiation therapy alone, rather than the
multimodal therapy necessary to treat lymphomas other than MALT [81]. Survival rates for lymphoma located in the thyroid gland (stage IE) are generally
favorable, with a 5-year survival rate of 75% to 85%. However, patients with diseases on both sides of the diaphragm (stage IIIE) or disseminated disease (stage
IV) have a 5-year survival rate of less than 35% [53].
4. Diagnosis
Thyroid cancer is discovered incidentally in the vast majority of cases during
imaging studies (computed tomography, positron emission tomography, magnetic resonance imaging or ultrasonography) performed for reasons unrelated to
the thyroid. The vast majority of patients with thyroid cancer have no specific
symptoms and the results of these incidentalomas will trigger a diagnostic evaluation. When patients present to a doctor with a specific symptom, it is often with
the finding of a new tumor/thyroid nodule, an increase in size of a previously
detected nodule, pain secondary to a nodule hemorrhage, or a lymph node palpable cervical [53]. Symptoms of dysphagia, dysphonia, or dyspnea often predict a
poor prognosis since these symptoms are the result of a local invasion and are
usually due to undifferentiated thyroid cancer, since differentiated tumors rarely
invade surrounding structures [5].
Performing a medical history and a complete physical exam is the first step in
the evaluation of a patient suspected of having thyroid cancer. Special attention
should be given to personal history of radiation exposure, family history of thyroid malignancy, or thyroid cancer syndromes (Carney complex, multiple endocrine neoplasia, familial adenomatous polyposis, and Cowden syndrome). Also,
ask about the symptoms of dysphagia, dysphonia or dyspnea that an invasive
component may suggest. The presence of diarrhea or facial hyperemia in association with nodular thyroid disease should increase suspicion for medullary thyroid carcinoma [79]. The physical examination should focus on findings suggestive of invasion or regional metastases that may include fixation to surrounding
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sence of these findings, the presence of slightly grown lymph nodes (1 to 2 cm)
together with a thyroid nodule suggests regional metastases [53] [81]. Palpable
lymphadenopathy is most frequently identified along the middle and lower portion of the jugular chain. Finally, before any surgical intervention, the extent of
the disease in the neck should be evaluated in anticipation of surgical positioning [53].
All patients undergoing thyroid surgery should have a preoperative evaluation
of the voice as part of their preoperative physical examination. This should include the description of the patient if he has voice changes, as well as the evaluation of the voice doctor (recommendation # 40 of the American Thyroid Association [ATA]) [34]. The preoperative laryngeal examination should be performed
in all patients with voice abnormalities in the preoperative period, a history of
cervical or upper thoracic surgery, which puts the recurrent laryngeal or vagus
nerve at risk, and in patients with known thyroid cancer with extra posterior
thyroid extension or extensive central nodal metastases (ATA recommendation
# 41) [34].
The prevalence of palpable thyroid nodules in the general population is approximately 5% to 7% in women and 1% in men living in parts of the world with
sufficient iodine [1] [2]. In contrast, high-resolution neck and thyroid ultrasound can detect thyroid nodules in approximately 19% to 68% of randomly selected people, with higher frequencies in women and the elderly [3] [4]. The
clinical importance of thyroid nodules lies in the need to rule out thyroid cancer,
which occurs between 7% and 15% of cases, varying according to age, sex, radiation exposure history, family history, among other factors [5] [6].
If a thyroid nodule larger than 1 cm in any diameter is identified, a serum level of thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) should be obtained (recommendation
2 ATA) [34]. If the TSH is low, a thyroid scan should be performed (the only indication today to perform this study) to document if the thyroid nodule is
hyperfunctional (“hot”, that is, the uptake of the marker is greater than the normal thyroid), isofuncionante (“warm”, that is, the uptake of the marker is equal
to the surrounding thyroid) or not functioning (“cold”, that is, it has a lower uptake than the thyroid tissue) [128]. Because hyperfunctional thyroid nodules
rarely contain malignancy, if one that corresponds to the nodule in question is
found, a cytological evaluation is not necessary [34]. High serum levels of TSH,
even within high ranges of normality, are associated with an increased risk of
malignancy in the thyroid nodule, as well as a more advanced stage of thyroid
cancer [129].
During the initial assessment of thyroid nodules, it is not recommended to
routinely obtain serum thyroglobulin (Tg) (ATA recommendation 3) [34]. Serum levels of Tg may be elevated in the vast majority of thyroid diseases (benign
and malignant) and is an insensitive and nonspecific test for thyroid cancer
[130] [131]. The utility of serum calcitonin in the initial assessment of thyroid
nodules has been evaluated in prospective non-randomized studies [132] [133]
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[134] [135], with mixed results, therefore, the ATA cannot recommend either
for or against the measurement Routine serum calcitonin in patients with thyroid nodules (ATA recommendation 4) [34].
High-resolution neck and thyroid ultrasound should be performed in all patients suspected of having thyroid nodules, nodular goiter, or any radiographic
abnormality that suggests a thyroid nodule detected incidentally in another imaging study (computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging), or 18FDGPET) (ATA recommendation 6) [34]. Ultrasound of the neck and thyroid should
evaluate the following characteristics [34]: the thyroid parenchyma (if homogeneous or heterogeneous), the size of the thyroid gland, the size, location, and ultrasonographic characteristics of any nodule, and finally the presence or absence
of suspicious cervical lymph nodes in the central or lateral compartments [34]
[53]. Table 4 shows the characteristics that should be assessed in the high-resolution
neck and thyroid ultrasound.
The ultrasonographic pattern associated with a thyroid nodule confers a risk
of malignancy, and combined with the size of the nodule, guides decision making (Table 5). The ultrasound pattern of high suspicion of malignancy includes
solid, hypoechoic nodules, or nodules with mixed components (solid hypoechoic
and partially cystic nodule) with one or more of the following characteristics: irregular margins (infiltrative, micro-lobulated), microcalcifications, higher form
than wide, calcifications at the edge of the cyst, evidence of extra thyroid extension [136] [137] [138].
The most accurate and cost-effective method for evaluating thyroid nodules is
fine needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) (ATA recommendation 7) [34]. Thyroid
nodules with a higher probability of obtaining a non-diagnostic cytology (cystic
component greater than 25% to 50%) or a sampling error (nodules difficult to
palpate or located in the posterior portion of the thyroid lobe), it is preferred to
perform a FNAB guided by ultrasound [139] [140]. Figure 1 and Figure 2 provide
Table 4. The characteristics that should be assessed in the ultrasound [233] [234].
• Node size (in three dimensions)
• The location (example—right upper lobe/if anterior or posterior)
• Description of the ultrasonographic characteristics of the thyroid nodule:
o Composition of the nodule:
Solid, cystic or spongiform
o Ecogenicity:
Isoechoic, hyperechoic, hypoechoic
o Margins:
Regular
Irregular:
Defined as infiltrative, microlobed or spiculated
o Presence and type of calcifications:
Marcocalcifications or microcalcifications
o Shape:
If the nodule is taller than wide
o Vascularity:
Central or peripheral
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Table 5. Ultrasonographic patterns of thyroid nodules, estimated risk of malignancy, and management guide for thyroid nodules
with FNAB [34] [143].
Ultrasonographic
Pattern
Estimated Risk
of Malignancy
Size to perform FNAB
High Risk
Hypoechoic, solid nodules, or nodules with mixed components
(solid and partially cystic hypoechoic nodule) with one or more of
the following characteristics: irregular margins (infiltrative,
microlobed), microcalcifications, taller than wide, calcifications on
the edge of the cyst, evidence of extra thyroid extension
Greater than
70% - 90%
FNAB is recommended if its
dimensions are equal to or greater
than 1.0 cm
Intermediate Risk
Hypoechoic solid nodule with smooth (regular) margins without
microcalcifications, no evidence of extra thyroid extension, and the
shape is not taller than wide
10% al 20%
FNAB is recommended if its
dimensions are equal to or greater
than 1.0 cm
Isoechoic or hyperechoic solid nodule, or partially cystic nodule with
eccentric solid areas, no microcalcification, no irregular margin, no
evidence of extra thyroid extension, no taller than wide
5% al 10%
FNAB is recommended if its
dimensions are equal to or greater
than 1.5 cm
Spongiform or partially cystic nodules without any of the
ultrasonographic features described in low, intermediate, or high
suspicion patterns
Less than 3%
FNAB can be considered if its
dimensions are equal to or greater
than 2.0 cm
Observation without BAAF is also
reasonable
Purely cystic nodules (without solid component)
Less than 1%
Do not perform FNAB
Low Risk
Very Low Risk
Benign
Ultrasonographic Characteristics
Suspicious Thyroid
Nodule
Elevated or Normal TSH
No nodule identified
Neck Ultrasound
High Risk
Ulltrasonographic
Pattern
FNAB in nodules equal
or greater than 1 cm
Iintermediate Risk
Ulltrasonographic
Pattern
FNAB in nodules equal
or greater than 1 cm
Thyroid nodule does not
meet criteria for FNAB
Low Risk
Ulltrasonographic
Pattern
Veru Low Risk
Ulltrasonographic
Pattern
FNAB in nodules equal
or greater than 1.5 cm
FNAB in nodules equal
or greater than 2.0 cm
Benign
Ulltrasonographic
Pattern
No FNAB Requiered
No FNAB Requiered
Figure 1. Algorithm for the initial evaluation and treatment of patients with thyroid nodules according to the ultrasonographic pattern.
Bethesda System
Non-Diagnostic
Biopsy
Repeat FNAB
(Ultrasound)
Benign
No Surgery
Requiered
Follow-Up
AUS / FLUS
Repeat FNAV, or
Molecular Test, or
Lobectomy
Follicular Neoplasm /
Suspicious for
Follicular Neoplasm
Molecular Test, or
Lobectomy
Suspicious for
Malignancy
Total Thyroidectomy,
or Lobectomy
Malignancy
Total Thyroidectomy,
or Lobectomy
Figure 2. Algorithm for the treatment of patients with thyroid nodules according to the pattern the result of the
FNAB [143].
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an algorithm for the initial evaluation and management of patients with thyroid
nodules based on their ultrasonographic pattern and the results of the FNAB
[34].
Non-diagnostic or unsatisfactory FNABs (Bethesda 1) are those that do not
meet the quantitative or qualitative requirements established to say that the cytological assessment is adequate (i.e., the presence of at least six groups of
well-visualized follicular cells, each group containing at least 10 well-preserved
epithelial cells, preferably in a single lamella) [141] [142] [143]. When a BAAF is
performed in a thyroid nodule and the initial cytology result is non-diagnostic,
the BAAF should be repeated with the support of ultrasound; and if available,
the cytological evaluation should be performed at the time of the FNAB (recommendation 10 of the ATA) [34] [144] [145] [146]. It has been suggested that
FNAB should be repeated no earlier than three months after the initial FNAB to
avoid a falsely positive interpretation due to biopsy-induced reactive changes
[147]. Two recent studies have questioned the need for a waiting period of three
months after the first FNAB because they found no correlation between the diagnostic performance and accuracy of the second FNAB and the waiting time
between procedures [148] [149]. The ATA tells us that a waiting period of three
months after a non-diagnostic biopsy is likely not necessary [34]. Thyroid nodules that have had multiple FNABs that turned out to be non-diagnostic without having a highly suspected ultrasonographic pattern may be recommended
observation vs. surgical excision to have a definitive histopathological diagnosis
(ATA recommendation 10) [34].
In published series of patients classified according to the Bethesda system,
non-diagnostic samples constituted 2% to 16% of all FNAB samples, of which
7% to 26% were resected [150] [151] [152]. The frequency of malignancy among
all FNABs initially rated as non-diagnostic was 2% to 4% and among the nondiagnostic samples that were finally resected the frequency of malignancy 9% to
32% [150] [151] [152].
If the thyroid nodule turns out to be benign in cytology after a FNAB (Bethesda 2), no additional diagnostic studies or immediate treatment are required
(ATA recommendation 11) [34]. Although prospective studies are lacking, the
rates of malignancy in the retrospective series range from 1% to 2% [143] [153]
[154] [155].
FNAB classified as atypia of undetermined significance or follicular lesion of
undetermined significance (Bethesda 3), is characterized by having specimens
containing cells with architectural and/or nuclear atypia that are more prominent than expected for benign changes, but not sufficient for be located in one of
the highest risk diagnostic categories [141] [143] [156]. In the studies that used
the criteria established by the Bethesda System, the risk of cancer for patients
with atypical nodules of undetermined significance or follicular lesion of undetermined significance who underwent surgery was 6% to 18% if NIFT (follicular
thyroid neoplasia. Non-invasive with papillary nuclear characteristics) is not
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considered as cancer, and 10% to 30% if NIFT is considered as a cancer [143].
For thyroid nodules with atypical cytology of undetermined significance or
follicular lesion of undetermined significance after a FNAB, with worrying clinical and ultrasonographic characteristics, the assessment can be continued by
repeating the BAAF or if you have the technology you can use molecular tests to
complement the risk assessment of malignancy instead of proceeding directly
with either a surveillance strategy or diagnostic surgery (lobectomy) [143]. Patient preference should be considered in decision making (recommendation 15
of the ATA) [34]. If the FNAB is not repeated, and molecular tests are not performed, or both studies proved inconclusive, a diagnostic surgical excision can
be performed for thyroid nodules with Bethesda 3 classification, according to
clinical risk factors, ultrasound pattern and patient preference (ATA recommendation 15) [34].
The diagnostic category of the Bethesda IV, follicular neoplasm/suspected cytology of follicular neoplasm is used for cellular aspirates:
• Composed of follicular cells arranged in an altered architectural pattern characterized by cell crowding and/or microfilm formation, lacking nuclear characteristics of papillary carcinoma; or
• Compounds almost exclusively of oncocytic cells (Hurthle) [141] [143] [157]
[158].
This is an intermediate risk category of malignancy in the Bethesda system,
with an estimated risk of malignancy between 10% to 40% if NIFT is not considered as cancer, and between 25% to 40% if NIFT is considered as cancer [143].
This category represents 1% to 25% (average, 10%) of all FNAB samples [34].
Diagnostic surgical excision (lobectomy) is the long-established standard for
the treatment of thyroid nodules with Bethesda IV cytology. However, today if
the technology is taken into account, after taking into account the clinical assessment and ultrasonographic characteristics, molecular tests can be used to
complement the assessment of the risk of malignancy rather than proceed directly with surgery (recommendation 16 of the ATA) [34]. Patient preference
should be considered in clinical decision making. If molecular tests cannot be
performed or are undetermined, surgical removal can be considered for the definitive diagnosis of thyroid nodules classified as Bethesda IV (ATA recommendation 16) [34].
The diagnostic category of the Bethesda V system, suspected cytology for malignancy represents 1% to 6% of all FNABs, and is reserved for aspirates with
cytological characteristics that generate a high suspicion of malignancy (mainly
for papillary thyroid carcinoma) but that they are not sufficient for a conclusive
diagnosis [141] [143] [159]. This is the category with the highest risk of undetermined cytology in the Bethesda System, with an estimated cancer risk of 45%
to 60% if NIFT is not considered as cancer and 50% to 75% if NIFT is considered as cancer [143]. Due to the high risk of cancer, the diagnosis of suspicious
papillary carcinoma is an indication for surgery [34].
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If the FNAB results in a suspicious cytology for papillary thyroid carcinoma,
surgical treatment should be very similar to the management of a frankly reported FNAB. Factors that we must take into account in offering the definitive
treatment with a suspicious cytology for papillary thyroid carcinoma, are the clinical risk factors, the ultrasonographic characteristics, the patient’s preference and
possibly the results of the molecular tests (BRAF, RAS, RET/PTC, PAX8/PPAR)
(ATA recommendation 17) [34].
If the cytological result is a diagnosis of primary thyroid malignancy, Bethesda
VI, surgery is generally recommended (ATA recommendation 12) [34]. A diagnostic cytology of primary thyroid malignancy will almost always lead to thyroid
surgery. However, in some parts of the world under active research protocol active surveillance can be offered as an alternative to immediate surgery in certain
patients who meet some very specific criteria [160] [161]:
• Patients with very low risk tumors (for example, papillary microcarcinomas
without clinically evident metastases or local invasion, and without convincing cytological evidence of aggressive disease);
• Patients with high surgical risk due to multiple comorbidities;
• Patients with a relatively short lifespan (for example, severe cardiopulmonary
disease, other malignant diseases, very old age);
• Patients with concurrent medical or surgical problems that must be addressed
before thyroid surgery.
5. Molecular Studies in the Valuation of Thyroid Nodes
In recent years, advances have been made in the identification of genes related to
the origin of thyroid cancer (see Table 1). Studies of the patterns of genetic alterations found in thyroid tumors suggest that there are differences in the pathogenesis of different types of thyroid tumors, which probably explains the range
of biological behavior observed between different types of thyroid neoplasms
[81]. The genomic panorama of papillary thyroid cancer was recently described
as part of The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) project in which a low frequency
of somatic mutations was found compared to other carcinomas and there was a
dominant role and mutual exclusivity of generating genetic mutations, somatic
in the MAPK and PI3K pathways [162]. In approximately 50% to 60% of cases, a
constitutive activation of the BRAF kinase, a member of the Ras/MAPK pathway,
is present and generally results from a substitution of amino acids V600E [32]
[162]. BRAF normally depends on the activation of Ras to propagate extracellular signal transduction [30].
The TCGA work indicated that papillary thyroid tumors that have the BRAF
V600E mutation represent a diverse group of tumors and should not be considered a homogeneous group; and I conclude that more studies are needed to
capture their genetic diversity [162]. On certain occasions, activation of the Ras
oncogene, located before BRAF, has also been implicated as an initiating event of
papillary thyroid carcinoma, as well as in follicular thyroid tumors [30] [162].
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Somatic mutations have been identified in the Ras oncogene (H-, K-, N-Ras)
in benign and malignant thyroid tumors (in 12% of papillary thyroid carcinomas in TCGA), and therefore appear to be an early event in thyroid tumorigenesis [162]. Some studies suggest that Ras mutations are more prevalent in follicular thyroid cancers, the follicular variant of papillary thyroid cancer, and in follicular adenomas [163]. Ras mutations can result in allelic loss or in chromosomal rearrangements that lead to increased rates of thyroid follicular cancer
formation [163]. There are differences in signaling in papillary thyroid tumors
driven by Ras and BRAF V600E; Papillary tumors with BRAF mutations signal
primarily through MAPK while papillary tumors with Ras mutations signal through
MAPK and PI3K; This may have broad implications for targeted therapies [30]
[163].
Chromosomal rearrangements have been observed in the formation of RET/
PTC fusion oncogenes; radiation-induced papillary tumors harbor this alteration
[164]. There are other relatively rare oncogenic fusions described in papillary
thyroid tumors such as BRAF, PAX8/PPARG, ETV6/NTRK3 and RBPMS/NTRK3
[165].
The RET proto-oncogene is a tyrosine kinase receptor that is expressed primarily in tumors of neural crest origin, which explains the high incidence of
mutations in medullary thyroid cancers that originate in parafollicular cells (C
cells) [166]. The RET gene is found on chromosome 10 and germline mutations
result in missense activating mutations that are responsible for 95% of hereditary
medullary thyroid carcinomas, including those associated with multiple endocrine neoplasia 2A and 2B [166] [167]. In 80% of cases of medullary thyroid cancer, the disease is sporadic, without a hereditary etiology, but a somatic mutation
is identified in the RET gene in 40% of these sporadic cases [79] [81] [167]. In
sporadic cases, mutations are found most often in codon 918 that results in the
constitutive activation of the RET tyrosine kinase receptor [75]. Almost all patients with multiple endocrine neoplasia 2A and 2B that are transmitted in an
autosomal dominant manner will develop medullary thyroid cancer and the detection of germline mutations in the RET gene has been of great value in the
early identification of patients who have a genetic basis for your disease [75].
Even in patients with sporadic medullary thyroid carcinoma, 6% to 10% of these
patients will have a mutation in the RET proto-oncogene germ line, which reveals a new family of patients with previously undiagnosed medullary thyroid
carcinoma [81]. The discovery of the RET proto-oncogene has had a very important clinical impact, which affects screening and prophylactic treatment of
patients who are members of families with multiple endocrine neoplasia and relatives of medullary thyroid cancer [81]. The somatic mutation in the Ras gene is
observed in approximately 15% of patients with sporadic medullary thyroid carcinoma [167].
Larger studies on the use of molecular tests in patients with undetermined
BAAF respectively evaluated a panel of seven genes of genetic mutations and chromosomal reconstructions (BRAF, RAS, RET/PTC, PAX8/PPAR) [168], an expresDOI: 10.4236/ijohns.2019.86024
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sion classifier gene (GEC 167; expression of messenger RNA of 167 genes) [169],
and the immunohistochemistry of galectin-3 (in cell blocks) [170]. There is currently no single optimal molecular test that can definitively confirm or rule out a
malignant neoplasm in all cases of undetermined cytology, and more studies are
needed long-term results that demonstrate clinical utility before the standard
becomes, but the future of the evaluation of thyroid nodules and management is
going in this direction.
6. Treatment of Thyroid Cancer
The treatment of thyroid tumors, and in some cases, when more tissue is needed
to properly diagnose a thyroid nodule, is surgical resection. The goal of thyroid
cancer management remains the complete elimination of the disease with minimal morbidity [81]. Adequate surgical treatment will allow careful postoperative follow-up, adjuvant therapies if necessary, and minimizes the possibility of
disease recurrence.
Surgery for thyroid cancer is a vital element of a multifaceted treatment approach. The recommended operation must be compatible with the general management strategy and the monitoring plan recommended by the multidisciplinary team. Experienced surgeons should be referred to patients with high-risk
characteristics (clinical disease N1, concern for invasion of the recurrent laryngeal nerve, or extremely invasive disease), since both the quality of the surgery
and the experience of the surgeon may have a significant impact on clinical outcomes and complication rates [171] [172] [173] [174].
Because papillary thyroid cancer has an extremely low mortality rate, recurrence of the disease has become the main objective of interest when deciding on
optimal surgical management for most patients [81]. For patients with papillary
thyroid cancer measuring more than 1 cm, the surgery that has historically been
recommended is a total thyroidectomy that certainly remains the appropriate
operation for well-differentiated high-risk thyroid cancers [34]. The reasons
used to consider performing a total thyroidectomy in low-risk thyroid carcinoma include lesions identified within the contralateral thyroid lobe because papillary thyroid cancer foci are found bilaterally in up to 85% of cases and in 5% to
10% of cases of recurrence the focus of recurrence is in the contralateral lobe
when a thyroid lobectomy is performed [81]. From the postoperative point of
view, the remaining thyroid tissue, if a more conservative resection is performed,
makes radioactive iodine ablation of the remaining gland prohibitive. In addition, the measurement of serum thyroglobulin as a marker of persistent or recurrent disease after thyroid lobectomy is more difficult to interpret given the
remaining thyroid tissue [81]. A total thyroidectomy avoids these difficulties and
minimizes re-operative surgery that is associated with an increase in complication rates.
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es (cN0), the initial surgical procedure should be a thyroid lobectomy unless
there are clear indications to remove the contralateral lobe (ATA recommendation 35) [34]. Thyroid lobectomy is a suitable treatment for small, unifocal intra-thyroid carcinomas, in the absence of previous radiation to the head and
neck, familial thyroid carcinomas, or clinically detectable cervical lymph node
metastases (ATA recommendation 35) [34]. The patient’s preference should always be taken into account during the treatment discussion.
For patients with thyroid cancer greater than 1 cm and less than 4 cm without
extra thyroid extension, and without clinical evidence of nodal metastases (cN0),
the initial surgical procedure may be a bilateral procedure (almost total or total
thyroidectomy) or a unilateral procedure (lobectomy) (ATA recommendation 35)
[34]. Thyroid lobectomy may be the initial treatment for low-risk papillary and
follicular carcinomas; however, the team managing the patient can choose total
thyroidectomy to allow treatment with radioactive iodine or to facilitate the follow-up of these patients (ATA recommendation 35) [34]. The patient’s preference should always be taken into account during the treatment discussion.
There is controversy over whether it should be performed and the extent of
prophylactic dissection of the lymph nodes in order to prevent local recurrence,
provide more accurate staging, and increase survival. The distinction between a
dissection of the therapeutic versus prophylactic (or elective) central compartment is that a therapeutic dissection implies that nodal disease has already occurred and has been detected clinically or by preoperative imaging (cN1 disease)
[53] [81]. A dissection of the elective or prophylactic central compartment implies that there is no clinical or radiographic evidence of nodal metastases [53]
[81]. This difference is important because the impact of having clinically detectable lymph nodes on survival and local recurrence may differ compared to microscopically detected disease. Similarly, a dissection of the central compartment
can be ipsilateral (the same side as the dominant tumor) or bilateral (ipsilateral
and contralateral) and it is important to document this distinction in the surgical
note.
The central compartment (level VI) is limited superiorly by the hyoid bone,
inferiorly by the innominate artery, and laterally by the carotid arteries [34].
Therapeutic dissection of the central compartment (level VI of the neck) for patients with clinically involved central nodes should accompany total thyroidectomy to provide complete resection of the disease (ATA recommendation 36) [34].
Preventive/prophylactic dissection of the central compartment (ipsilateral or bilateral) in patients with papillary thyroid carcinoma with clinically non-involved
lymph nodes (cN0) in patients with advanced primary tumors (T3 or T4), or
clinically compromised lymph nodes in the lateral compartment of the neck
(cN1b), or if the information will be used to plan additional steps in therapy (ATA
recommendation 36) [34]. Thyroidectomy without prophylactic dissection of the
central compartment is appropriate for small papillary tumors (T1 or T2), noninvasive, with clinically negative lymph nodes (cN0) and for most follicular cancers (ATA recommendation 36) [34]. Therapeutic dissection of the lymph nodes
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in the lateral compartment should be performed in patients with metastatic lateral cervical lymphadenopathy proven by biopsy (ATA recommendation 37)
[34]. The isolated removal of the affected lymph nodes, known as “berry picking,” violates the central compartment without adequately addressing the full
extent of the disease and may be associated with higher rates of recurrence and
morbidity in revision surgery [81].
Usually, the diagnosis of a follicular cell carcinoma or Hürthle is made after
the surgical procedure, which is usually a thyroid lobectomy. In these circumstances, a total thyroidectomy is often performed in high-risk patients when it is
anticipated that the patient will require adjuvant treatment with radioactive
iodine, since all thyroid tissue must be removed for radioactive iodine to be effective [53] [81]. Patients who underwent a thyroid lobectomy should be offered
to complete the total thyroidectomy to patients who would have recommended a
bilateral thyroidectomy if the diagnosis had been available before the initial surgery (ATA recommendation 38) [34]. Therapeutic dissection of the lymph nodes
in the central compartment should be included if the lymph nodes are clinically
involved (ATA recommendation 38) [34]. Thyroid lobectomy alone can be considered as a sufficient management for low-risk papillary and follicular carcinomas (ATA recommendation 38) [34]. Ablation with radioactive iodine instead of
completing thyroidectomy is not routinely recommended; however, it can be
used to burn the remaining lobe in selected cases (ATA recommendation 38)
[35].
Anaplastic carcinoma represents a unique challenge because it is rarely diagnosed in a timely manner, so surgical management is usually only offered as a
palliative option [53] [81] [95]. In the rare case in which anaplastic carcinoma
has been diagnosed incidentally or at the beginning of its evolution, total thyroidectomy with central compartment lymphadenectomy and ipsilateral modified radical lymphadenectomy offers the best chance of survival in the exceptional case that the tumor is intra-thyroid [91] [95] [101]. Given the aggressive
nature and limited survival for patients with anaplastic carcinoma, aggressive
surgical intervention involving resection of adjacent structures, such as the larynx, pharynx or esophagus, is often avoided due to the associated excessive
morbidity [101]. Resection of disease that extends beyond the thyroid gland may
be appropriate in highly selected individuals as part of a multimodal treatment
regimen along with radiation, chemotherapy, and immunotherapy [99].
7. Staging of Thyroid Cancer
Staging of thyroid carcinoma is performed more frequently using the American
Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) system [175]. Other staging systems validated by multiple studies have been used to predict the specific survival of thyroid cancer, including AGES (age, grade, extent, size), AMES (age, metastasis,
extension, size), MACIS (metastasis, age, resection, invasion and size integrity)
and EORTC (European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer). In
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the medical literature between 1960 and 1970 several articles were published
confirming that the cell of origin of thyroid cancer was crucial to discuss the
prognosis of these tumors [176] [177]. The Mayo Clinic group reported its results from a population of 859 patients with papillary thyroid cancer treated at
their institution between 1940 and 1970. Their results suggested that an advanced age at diagnosis, extra thyroid extension, and metastasis at a distance
they were strong predictors of death. These results were replicated by several
groups including that of Mazzaferri who reported similar results to those of the
Mayo Clinic in a population of 576 patients with papillary thyroid cancer [178]
[179].
The Mayo Clinic combined the risk factors of age, histological grade of the
tumor, extent of the disease, and the size of the lesion in the AGES system to
predict the risk of mortality (low risk or high risk). Subsequently, this system
was improved to include resection quality by reporting the system as MACIS
[180]. Cady et al. they reviewed the Lahey clinic database that included more
than 800 patients treated over a period of four decades reporting very similar
results introducing the AMES system that included age, distant metastasis, extra
thyroid extension, and the size of the lesion by classifying patients in high risk or
low risk groups for mortality [181]. A similar group of risk factors was reported
by the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center group that resulted in the
GAMES system (which included the histological grade) [182]. They separated
patients and tumors into two groups, one high risk and the other low risk for
mortality [182]. They also introduced an intermediate group for young patients
with tumor risk factors of poor prognosis, or for elderly patients without tumor
risk factors for poor prognosis [183]. The impact of lymph node metastases on
thyroid cancer mortality is very limited, which is why it has not been included as
a risk factor in most predictive mortality systems. The first works of Cady et al.
they suggested that lymph node metastases had a protective effect [184], a finding that can be explained because their cohort consisted of young patients, and
the association of young age with excellent survival and a higher incidence of
lymph node metastases. Subsequently Hughes et al. showed that in patients
younger than 45 years regional metastases were not associated with a higher
mortality. However, in older patients, lymph node metastases had a significant
impact on mortality [185]. From the last edition of the AJCC, nodal metastases
(N) were included as part of staging in patients older than 45 years [186].
Many similar risk prediction tools have been published focusing on the risk of
death from well-differentiated thyroid cancer [187]. Unfortunately, none of the
staging systems, including the AJCC system, have been shown to be superior
[175]. The ATA in 2009 and with its recent modifications in 2015 published
guidelines for staging patients based on their risk of recurrence [34]. Again, predictive risk factors for recurrence include the quality of surgical resection, the
presence of distant metastases, the presence of extra thyroid extension, and
high-risk histopathological factors. None of the staging systems have a better
predictive value than the other in the prediction of recurrent disease, especially
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in individuals who develop thyroid cancer at an early age [175]. Unlike the previously cited staging systems that calculate the risk of death, nodal metastases do
have an intermediate risk of recurrence. As almost no well-differentiated thyroid
cancer patient is going to die of their disease, a staging system designed to predict the risk of recurrence rather than mortality can prove to be of greater clinical utility for modern physicians.
Staging using the AJCC system is recommended for all patients with differentiated thyroid cancer, depending on its usefulness in predicting disease mortality
and its requirement for cancer registries (ATA recommendation 478) [175]. The
8th edition of the AJCC staging system modified the definitions of the primary
tumor and nodal metastases (Tables 6-8) [175]. Age at the time of diagnosis is
Table 6. AJCC staging system for papillary, follicular, poorly differentiated, Hürthle cell,
and anaplastic thyroid cancer [175].
Definition of the Primary Tumor (T)
TX—Primary tumor cannot be evaluated
T0—No evidence of primary tumor
T1—Tumor ≥ 2 cm in the largest dimension limited to the thyroid:
T1a—Tumor ≤ 1 cm in the largest dimension limited to the thyroid
T1b—Tumor > 1 cm, but ≤ 2 cm in the largest dimension limited to the thyroid
T2—Tumor > 2 cm, but ≤ 4 cm in the largest dimension limited to the thyroid
T3—Tumor > 4 cm limited to the thyroid or extra gross thyroid extension that invades only the
pre-thyroid muscles:
T3a—Tumor > 4 cm limited to the thyroid
T3b—Extra macroscopic thyroid extension that invades only pre-thyroid muscles (sternohyoid,
sternothyroid, thyroid or omohyoid muscles) of a tumor of any size
T4—Includes extra gross thyroid extension:
T4a—Extra macroscopic thyroid extension that invades subcutaneous soft tissue, larynx, trachea,
esophagus, or recurrent laryngeal nerve of a tumor of any size
T4b—Extra macroscopic thyroid extension that invades the prevertebral fascia, or covers the
carotid artery, or mediastinal vessels, of a tumor of any size
Definition of regional lymph nodes (N)
NX—Regional lymph nodes cannot be evaluated
N0—There is no evidence of loco-regional lymph node metastasis:
N0a—One or more benign lymph nodes cytologically or histologically confirmed
N0b—There is no radiological or clinical evidence of regional crazy lymph node metastases
N1—Metastasis to regional nodes:
N1a—Metastasis to lymph nodes of level VI or VII (pretracheal, paratracheal or
prelaringeal/Delphiano or upper mediastinal). This may be a unilateral or bilateral disease.
N1b—Metastasis in the lateral, lateral bilateral lymph nodes,
or contralateral (level I, II, III, IV or V), or retropharyngeal lymph nodes
Definition of distant metastasis (M)
M0—No distant metastasis
M1—Remote metastasis
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Table 7. Prognostic groups based on AJCC staging in well differentiated thyroid cancer
[175].
Age at diagnosis
T
N
M
Stage
<55 years
Any T
Any N
M0
I
<55 years
Any T
Any N
M1
II
≥55 years
T1
N0/NX
M0
I
≥55 years
T1
N1
M0
II
≥55 years
T2
N0/NX
M0
I
≥55 years
T2
N1
M0
II
≥55 years
T3a/T3b
Any N
M0
II
≥55 years
T4a
Any N
M0
III
≥55 years
T4b
Any N
M0
IVA
≥55 years
Any T
Any N
M1
IVB
Table 8. Prognostic groups based on AJCC staging in anaplastic thyroid cancer [175].
T
N
M
Stage
T1-T3a
N0/NX
M0
IVA
T1-T3a
N1
MO
IVB
T3b
Any N
M0
IVB
T4
Any N
M0
IVB
Any T
Any N
M1
IVC
perhaps one of the most important predictive factors for patients with well-differentiated thyroid cancer, as evidenced by their inclusion in the AJCC manual,
as well as in each of the other staging systems mentioned previously [175] [178][183]. It has also been shown in some studies that the male gender is an independent predictor of survival, since in these studies thyroid cancer is more aggressive in men [188] [189] [190], although this variable is not specifically included in any system of staging because. In general, the prognosis of patients
with well-differentiated thyroid carcinoma is based on their age, sex, extent of
disease and the size of their primary tumor. The issue of lymph node metastases
and prognosis is still debated as previously mentioned in the text, since lymph
node involvement predicts local recurrence but does not contribute significantly
to patient survival [175]. Involvement of lymph nodes affects the classification of
AJCC staging only in patients older than 55 years [175].
The AJCC staging for thyroid cancer stratifies patients in four stages according to the TNM classification, with the exception of anaplastic tumors, which are
always considered stage IV [175]. Staging is based on the histology of the primary tumor and the patient’s age (for differentiated cancer), which demonstrates the
importance of these parameters in survival and prognosis. The eighth edition of
the AJCC staging system for differentiated thyroid cancer has been updated
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compared to previous editions as the age of diagnosis increased from 45 years to
55 years [175]. The limited extra thyroid extension was eliminated from the definition of T3 disease [175]. T3a is now a new category and refers to tumors
larger than 4 cm in the largest dimension, but still limited to the thyroid gland
[175]. T3b is also a new category defined as a tumor of any size with extra gross
thyroid extension that invades only the pre-thyroid muscles [175]. Importantly,
the definition of the central compartment was expanded to include both level VI
and level VII lymph nodes [175].
Survival rates for various thyroid cancers are presented in Table 9. Although
similar for stage I disease, survival for follicular thyroid cancer is slightly worse
than for papillary cancer and this is probably due to the trend of hematogenous
dissemination, age and the most advanced stage at the time of diagnosis [81].
Anaplastic thyroid cancer has one of the worst survival rates of all malignant
neoplasms with a 1-year survival of 17% and a 5-year survival of approximately
6%, which demonstrates the aggressiveness of this disease [175]. In general, the
prognosis for patients diagnosed with thyroid cancer is good with survival rates
greater than 85% to 90% for most stages, probably as a result of the indolent nature of the disease.
8. Adjuvant Treatment
The objectives of adjuvant treatment include prolonging survival and reducing
future recurrence of thyroid cancer. Retrospective cohort studies of patients followed postoperatively for several decades suggest that multimodal adjuvant
therapy may decrease local recurrence and may improve survival [53] [81] [191]
[192] [193] [194] [195]. The ATA recently created and updated the initial risk
stratification system (Table 10), recommending its use for patients with differentiated thyroid cancer treated with thyroidectomy, based on its usefulness in
predicting the risk of recurrence and/or persistence of disease [175]. This initial risk
stratification system for well-differentiated thyroid cancer utilizes the histology,
Table 9. Relative stage-specific survival for thyroid cancer [175].
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Stage I
Stage II
Stage III
Stage IV
Papillary Cancer
1 year
5 years
99.9%
99.8%
100%
100%
97.7%
93.3%
77.6%
50.7%
Follicular Cancer
1 year
5 years
99.7%
99%
99.6%
99.7%
91.1%
71.1%
78.5%
50.4%
Medullary Cancer
1 year
5 years
100%
100%
100%
97.9%
96%
81%
64.3%
27.7%
Anaplastic Cancer
1 year
5 years
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
18%
6.9%
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Table 10. ATA modified initial risk stratification system [34].
ATA Low Risk
Papillary thyroid cancer (with all of the following):
• Does not have local or distant metastases
• The entire macroscopic tumor has been resected
• It has no tumor invasion of loco-regional structures or tissues
• The tumor has no aggressive histology (high cell carcinoma, Hobnail
variant, and columnar cell carcinoma)
• If I131 is administered, avid metastatic foci outside the thyroid bed
should not be identified in the first post-treatment full-body thyroid
scan
• Without vascular invasion
• cN0 or ≤5 pN1 micro-metastases (<0.2 cm in the largest dimension)
Papillary thyroid cancer of intra-thyroid follicular variant, encapsulated
Intra-thyroid well differentiated follicular thyroid cancer with capsular
invasion and no or minimal vascular invasion (<4 foci)
Intra-thyroid, unifocal or multifocal papillary microcarcinoma, including
mutated BRAF V600E (if known)
Microscopic invasion of the tumor to the peri-thyroid soft tissues
Avid metastatic foci of radioactive iodine in the neck at the first full-body
scan post-treatment Aggressive histology (high cell carcinoma, Hobnail
variant, and columnar cell carcinoma)
ATA Intermediate Risk
Papillary thyroid cancer with vascular invasion
cN1 or >5 pN1 with all lymph nodes affected <3 cm in greatest
dimension Multifocal papillary microcarcinoma with extra thyroid
extension and mutated BRAF V600E (if known)
ATA High Risk
Macroscopic invasion of peri-thyroid soft tissue tumor
Incomplete tumor resection
Distant metastasis
Postoperative serum thyroglobulin suggestive of distant metastases
pN1 with any metastatic lymph node ≥ 3 cm in greatest dimension
Follicular thyroid cancer with extensive vascular invasion (>4 foci of
vascular invasion)
characteristics of the pathology, and the mutational state of the cancer (Table
10) to aid in decision-making for the start of adjuvant therapy [175]. The initial
ATA risk stratification system recommends using it for patients with differentiated thyroid cancer treated with thyroidectomy, based on its usefulness in predicting the risk of recurrence and/or persistence of the disease (ATA recommendation 48) [175]. Additional prognostic variables (such as the degree of
lymph node involvement, mutational status and/or the degree of vascular invasion in thyroid follicular cancer) not included in the 2009 ATA initial risk stratification system can be used to further refine plus risk stratification for differentiated thyroid cancer (Table 10) in the modified initial risk stratification system
(ATA recommendation 48) [175]. However, the incremental benefit of adding
these specific prognostic variables to the 2009 internal risk stratification system
has not been established.
The basis of adjuvant treatment for well-differentiated thyroid carcinoma is
treatment with radioactive iodine (I131) and suppression of TSH [34]. The use
of radioactive therapeutic ablation of the remaining thyroid tissue after thyroidectomy is well established, but the criteria for the use of this treatment vary
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between institutions. The majority (≥75%) of follicular cell thyroid carcinomas
retain the ability of normal thyroid follicular cells to absorb and concentrate iodine
[196]. This iodine concentration capacity is less efficient than that observed in
normal thyroid glands, due to the abnormal architecture of follicular structures
within cancer, it makes it difficult to organize and retain the isotope, which explains why cancers typically look as “cold” nodules in isotopic images on thyroid
scintigraphy [196] [197]. However, this conserved differentiated function allows
radioactive isotopes of iodine to be used both for localization and for the treatment of residual thyroid carcinoma [198] [199].
When administered orally, all iodine isotopes are rapidly and very efficiently
absorbed from the proximal gastrointestinal tract, circulate transiently in the
bloodstream, and are concentrated in tissues that express a functional sodium
iodide transporter (NIS) [200]. The remaining isotope is filtered and excreted
through the kidneys, with radiation exposure to the entire urinary tract. Tissues
that actively concentrate iodine include normal and cancerous thyroid tissue, salivary gland, breast (particularly during breastfeeding), stomach, kidney, and
colon [200] [201]. The absorption of iodine in normal and malignant thyroid
tissue, although not in most other tissues, depends on the activity of the TSH receptor, which regulates expression and increases the activation of NIS in thyroid
tissue [202]. Similarly, thyroid tissue is capable of organizing iodine to thyroglobulin, a reaction that requires at least one partially intact follicular structure
[203]. Such organization increases the biological half-life of iodine, increasing
the exposure of thyroid tissue to irradiation and improving cell injury and cell
death induced by radiation [203].
Radioactive isotopes of iodine in clinical use (I131, I123) emit γ rays, which
can be detected using an appropriate detection device (a gamma camera), allowing imaging of tissues that concentrate iodine and therefore the detection
and localization of thyroid cancer metastasis or residues, after stimulation with
TSH [204]. This full-body scanning technique became the pillar of postoperative
surveillance of thyroid cancer in North America in the 80s and 90s, although it
has been used less frequently in recent years, due to improved technology. of ultrasound, cross-sectional images, and measurements of thyroglobulin that proved
to be more sensitive and more specific [205]. However, the introduction of single photon emission tomography (SPECT), in particular, to more accurately locate areas of iodine concentration ensures that isotope images continue to play a
useful role in the evaluation of patients with cancer of residual thyroid [206].
Although γ rays are high energy, their absorption in the tissue is low and most
of these particles do not interact with the cell in which the iodine is concentrated, or with the surrounding tissue [207] [208]. Although this is optimal for
imaging, because it provides good image resolution, γ rays are not particularly
effective in the treatment of residual thyroid carcinoma, which instead depends
on the emission of beta particles, the main particle emitted by the decomposition
of the I131 but not of I123 [208]. Moderately high energy beta particles emitted
by I131 have a medium length and a short path in human tissues, traveling, on
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average, only 0.5 cm before interacting with the surrounding tissue [209]. The
resulting ionization causes DNA damage, including single and double stranded
DNA breaks [210]. This DNA lesion is detected by the cell, activating the p53
pathway, which is commonly intact in differentiated thyroid carcinoma cells
[210]. Faced with minor damage to the DNA, cell repair mechanisms are activated, and usually restore the cell to its normal state, although with the potential
for induction of additional mutations or chromosomal rearrangements. However, with more extensive DNA damage, activation of p53 triggers apoptosis (programmed cell death) of the affected cell [211] [212]. Because cancer cells, including
in thyroid cancer, often lack efficient mechanisms to repair double-stranded
DNA ruptures, there is reason to believe that residual thyroid cancer is susceptible to the effects of beta irradiation, more than the surrounding normal tissue,
although there are still no in vitro or clinical data to support this hypothesis
[213].
The disease status in the postoperative period (i.e. the presence or absence of
persistent disease) should be considered when deciding whether additional treatment (for example, radioactive iodine, surgery or other treatment) may be needed
(ATA recommendation 50) [34]. Postoperative serum thyroglobulin (during
treatment with thyroid hormone or after TSH stimulation) can help assess the
persistence of residual disease or thyroid and predict the possible recurrence of
the disease in the future (ATA recommendation 50) [34]. Thyroglobulin should
reach its nadir in 3 to 4 weeks after the operation in most patients. The optimal
cut-off value of postoperative serum thyroglobulin or the state in which it should
be measured (under treatment with thyroid hormones or after TSH stimulation)
to guide decision-making regarding iodine administration is unknown radioactive.
Scanning of the entire body diagnosis with postoperative radioactive iodine
may be useful when the extent of thyroid remnant or residual disease cannot be
determined accurately from the surgical report or neck ultrasound, and when
the results may alter the decision to treat with radioactive iodine or the activity
of the radioactive iodine to be administered (ATA recommendation 50) [34].
The identification and location of the foci of uptake can be improved by computed tomography by concomitant single photon emission (SPECT/CT). When
these studies are carried out in a diagnostic manner before starting the definitive
treatment, I123 (1.5 to 3 mCi) or a low activity of I131 (1 to 3 mCi) must be performed, with the therapeutic activity optimally administered within 72 hours of
the activity for diagnosis (ATA recommendation 50) [34].
Ablation of the possible thyroid remnant with radioactive iodine is not routinely recommended after thyroidectomy for patients with differentiated thyroid
cancer at low risk of recurrence based on the ATA classification (ATA recommendation 51) [34]. Ablation of the possible thyroid remnant with radioactive
iodine is not routinely recommended after lobectomy or total thyroidectomy in
patients with unifocal papillary microcarcinoma, in the absence of other adverse
features (ATA recommendation 51) [34]. Ablation of the possible thyroid remDOI: 10.4236/ijohns.2019.86024
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nant with radioactive iodine is not routinely recommended after thyroidectomy
in patients with multifocal papillary microcarcinoma in the absence of other adverse features (ATA recommendation 51) [34]. The consideration of the specific
characteristics of the individual patient that could modulate the risk of recurrence, the implications of the disease follow-up and the preferences of the patient are relevant for the decision making of the RAI. Adjuvant therapy with radioactive iodine should be considered after total thyroidectomy in patients with
differentiated thyroid cancer with a risk of intermediate recurrence based on the
ATA classification (ATA recommendation 51) [34]. Adjuvant radioactive iodine
therapy is routinely recommended after total thyroidectomy for patients with
differentiated thyroid cancer with a high risk of recurrence based on the ATA
classification (ATA recommendation 51) [34].
The role of molecular tests to guide the postoperative use of radioactive iodine
has not yet been established; therefore, the ATA guidelines (ATA recommendation 52) [34] and the NCCN cannot recommend the use of molecular tests to
guide the postoperative use of radioactive iodine at this time [34] [80].
If abstention from thyroid hormone intake (levothyroxine/T4) is planned before radioactive iodine therapy or diagnostic tests, levothyroxine should be suspended for 3 to 4 weeks. Liothyronine (T3) can be substituted for levothyroxine
in the initial weeks, if it is planned to withdraw levothyroxine for 4 or more
weeks, and in such circumstances, liothyronine should be withdrawn for at least
2 weeks. Serum TSH should be measured before administration of the radioisotope to assess the degree of elevation of TSH (ATA recommendation 53) [34]. In
general, a TSH goal of greater than 30 mIU/L is recommended in preparation for
treatment with radioactive iodine or before performing diagnostic tests, but
there is uncertainty regarding the optimal level of TSH associated with the improvement in long-term results [214] [215].
In patients categorized by the classification of the ATA with low risk and intermediate risk ATA of recurrence without extensive lymph node involvement
(T1-T3, N0/NX/N1a, M0), in whom the ablation of the remnant with radioactive
iodine is planned or adjuvant therapy, preparation with recombinant human
TSH hormone stimulation (rhTSH) is an acceptable alternative to thyroid hormone withdrawal to achieve thyroid remnant ablation, based on clinical evidence of superior short-term quality of life, the non-inferiority of the efficacy of
ablation to the remnant, and multiple observational studies that suggest a nonsignificant difference in long-term outcomes (ATA recommendation 54) [34]
[216] [217] [219]. In patients with intermediate-risk thyroid cancer based on the
classification of ATA who have extensive lymph node disease (multiple clinically
involved nodes) in the absence of distant metastases, preparation with rhTSH
stimulation can be considered as an alternative to abstinence from Thyroid hormone before adjuvant treatment with RAI (ATA recommendation 54) [34]. In
patients with high-risk thyroid cancer based on the classification of ATA with
higher associated risks of disease-related mortality and morbidity, more data
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mending the preparation of rhTSH for adjuvant treatment with radioactive iodine
(ATA recommendation 54) [34]. In patients with thyroid cancer at any level of
risk with significant comorbidity that may prevent thyroid hormone withdrawal
before radioactive iodine administration, the preparation of rhTSH should be
considered. Significant comorbidity may include: 1) a significant medical or psychiatric illness that could be exacerbated acutely with hypothyroidism, which
could lead to a serious adverse event; or 2) inability to establish an adequate endogenous TSH response with withdrawal from thyroid hormone (ATA recommendation 54) [34].
If the ablation of the remnant with radioactive iodine is performed after total
thyroidectomy for low-risk thyroid cancer according to the classification of ATA
or intermediate risk disease with lower risk characteristics (i.e. low volume central lymph node metastases without other disease known macroscopic residual
or any other adverse characteristics), the administered activity of approximately
30 mCi is generally favored by the higher administered activities (ATA recommendation 55) [34]. Higher administered activities may have to be considered
for patients receiving less than a total or near-total thyroidectomy in which a
larger remnant is suspected or in which adjuvant therapy is desired (ATA recommendation 55) [34]. When radioactive iodine is intended as an initial adjuvant therapy to treat residual microscopic disease, activities administered above
those used for ablation of the remnant of up to 150 mCi (in the absence of known
distant metastases) are generally recommended. It is not clear whether the systematic use of higher administered activities (>150 mCi) in this context will reduce the recurrence of structural disease for T3 and N1 disease (ATA recommendation 56) [34].
A low iodine diet should be considered for approximately 1 to 2 weeks before
the administration of radioactive iodine for patients who undergo ablation or
treatment of the remnant (ATA recommendation 57) [34] [219] [220] [221]. A
full-body scan (with or without SPECT/CT) is recommended after ablation or
treatment of the remnant with radioactive iodine, to report disease staging and
document the avidity of radioactive iodine to any structural disease (ATA recommendation 58) [34].
Patients receiving hormone replacement treatment as part of the adjuvant
management of thyroid cancer are started with sodium levothyroxine at a dose
between 1.8 to 2.1 μg/kg/day [222] [223]. The dose may vary between patients
and is adjusted to achieve an adequate level of TSH suppression, as determined
based on the risk status of the individual patient. Patients with high-risk thyroid
cancer, the appropriate degree of initial TSH suppression is recommended below
0.1 mU/L (ATA recommendation 59) [34]. For patients with intermediate-risk
thyroid cancer, the initial suppression of TSH is recommended around 0.1 to 0.5
mU/L (ATA recommendation 59) [34]. Low-risk patients according to the ATA
classification that have had a remnant ablation and have undetectable thyroglobulin levels, TSH can be maintained at the lower end of the reference range (0.5
to 2 mU/L) while continuing with surveillance for recurrence (recommendation
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59 of the ATA) [34]. This recommendation is valid for low-risk patients who
have not undergone ablation of the remnant and have undetectable levels of thyroglobulin. Low-risk patients who have undergone ablation of the remnant and
have detectable but low levels of thyroglobulin, TSH can be maintained at a slightly
lower level than normal (0.1 to 0.5 mU/L) while continuing surveillance for recurrence (recommendation 59 of the ATA) [34]. This recommendation is valid
for low-risk patients who have not undergone ablation of the remnant, even if
the levels of thyroglobulin are high and monitoring for recurrence is continued
(ATA recommendation 59) [34]. For low-risk patients who have undergone a hemithyroidectomy (lobectomy), TSH can be maintained in the mid-to-lower reference range (0.5 to 2 mU/L) while continuing surveillance for recurrence (recommendation 59 of the ATA) [34]. Thyroid hormone therapy may not be necessary if patients can maintain their TSH in this target range.
The role of radiotherapy as part of the initial adjuvant treatment regimen for
differentiated thyroid cancer is controversial. Several retrospective series have
reported that local control can be improved with external radiotherapy, specifically in patients with macroscopic residual disease after surgical resection or in
patients considered to have a high risk of relapse; however, possible side effects
should be considered [224] [225]. Currently, radiotherapy is most commonly
used to alleviate metastatic or locally advanced disease, such as bone metastases
or recurrences in the thyroid bed not suitable for additional surgical resection, or
in an attempt to avoid more extensive surgery such as laryngectomy [34] [53]
[81]. The ATA does not recommend routine adjuvant external radiation therapy
for the neck in patients with differentiated thyroid cancer after complete surgical
excision (ATA recommendation 60) [34].
In general, traditional chemotherapy has not been very effective in the treatment of thyroid carcinomas. Chemotherapy has a very limited use in the treatment of differentiated thyroid cancer and ATA does not recommend routine
systemic adjuvant therapy in patients with differentiated thyroid cancer (beyond
radioactive iodine therapy and TSH suppressive therapy) (ATA recommendation 61) [34]. However, chemotherapy, in combination with radiotherapy and
surgery, is used more frequently to treat anaplastic cancer, for which there is a
lack of effective therapies [111] [113] [226]. Intravenous bisphosphonates can be
administered in patients with bone metastases [226].
In general, differentiated thyroid cancer is considered advanced (possibly requiring additional therapy) when recurrent or metastatic lesions no longer absorb radioactive iodine, or have increased in size as part of a recent treatment
with radioactive iodine (refractory to radioactive iodine), or if the recommended
lifetime dose of radioactive iodine (600 mCi) has been exceeded. Exceeding a lifetime dose of 600 to 1000 mCi increases the risk of pulmonary and spinal toxicity.
Loss of radioactive iodine absorption is often associated with increased fluorodeoxyglucose uptake (FDG) in positron emission tomography (PET); therefore,
additional sites of the disease are often detected with this imaging modality. Once
the carcinoma no longer responds to treatment with radioactive iodine and is
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PET positive, survival drops (2.5 to 3.5 years) [227]. There is an exception, those
that have only one metabolically active focus (positive PET) that is suitable for
resection or other modalities of local ablation [227] [228].
Considerable progress has been made in the management of patients with locally advanced and metastatic thyroid cancer. Several tyrosine kinase inhibitors
have shown activity in this context, exploiting the vascular nature of these tumors and/or the strong association with genetic mutations that lead to aberrant
intracellular signaling (Table 11). The majority (motesanib, sunitinib, sorafenib
and pazopanib) target mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and antiangiogenic pathways [33] [36] [38] [39]. In a phase I study with 17 patients, sorafenib produced a partial response in 30% of patients, and stable disease in 41% of
patients with differentiated thyroid cancer refractory to radioactive iodine [229].
In a phase III study of 417 patients (DECISION), the efficacy and safety of sorafenib against placebo were investigated in patients with progressive differentiated thyroid cancer and refractory to radioactive iodine [230]. Patients treated
with sorafenib experienced significantly longer mean survival compared to the
10.8 month placebo group against 5.8 months (HR: 0.58, 95% CI 0.45 - 0.75; p <
0.0001), had a better response rate (12.2% against 0.5%; p < 0.0001), and stable
disease ≥ 6 months (42% vs. 33%). Most of the adverse events related to this
treatment were manageable (grade 1 or 2) and tended to occur at the beginning
of treatment [231].
Based on these results, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved
sorafenib for the treatment of well-differentiated locally advanced or metastatic,
progressive thyroid cancer, refractory to radioactive iodine treatment. The recommended dose of sorafenib is 400 mg (two 200 mg tablets) twice daily without
food (at least 1 hour before or 2 hours after a meal).
Lenvatinib is an oral tyrosine kinase inhibitor that targets VEGFR, fibroblast
growth factor receptor, RET, KIT, and platelet-derived growth factor receptor
Table 11. Results of clinical studies of agents targeted for differentiated thyroid cancer.
Intervention
Baseline characteristics (%)
N
Axitinib [235]
Papillary (50), medullary (18), follicular/Hurthle (25/18),
anaplastic (3)
60
Axitinib [236]
Well differentiated thyroid cancer (71), medullary (29)
41
Motesanib [237]
Papillary (61), follicular/Hurthle (34)
93
Pazopanib [238]
Differentiated thyroid cancer (progression in <6 months)
Selumetinib [239]
Free survival
Partial
Stable
without progression
response (%) disease (%)
(median/months)
30
48
34
25
10
14
67
37
12
49
Papilla with or without follicular elements (100)
39
8
3
54
Sorafenib/temsirolimus
[240]
Papillary (62), follicular/Hurthle (14), poorly
differentiated (16), anaplastic (3)
37
22
57
Sunitinib [241]
Differential thyroid cancer (74%), medullary (26)
51
17
74
Vandetanib [242]
Papillary (40), follicular (13), poorly differentiated (47)
72
1
56
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(PDGFR) approved for the treatment of patients with differentiated thyroid
cancer, locally advanced or metastatic, progressive, and refractory to radioactive
iodine. In the phase III study called SELECT, Schlumberger et al., investigated
the efficacy and safety of Lenvatinib versus placebo in patients (N = 392) with
well-differentiated progressive thyroid cancer and refractory to radioactive iodine
[231]. Patients treated with Lenvatinib experienced a significantly longer median
free survival versus placebo 18.3 months versus 3.6 months (HR: 0.21, 99% CI:
0.14 - 0.31, p < 0.0001), as well as a significantly higher response rate (64.8% vs.
1.5; p < 0.0001). Adverse effects related to Lenvatinib of special interest with
grade ≥ 3 include hypertension (42.9%), proteinuria (10%), arterial thromboembolic effects (2.7%) and venous thromboembolic effects (3.8%) [231].
Additional studies are underway to evaluate more agents targeting other pathways known to be altered in thyroid tumors, including the endothelial growth factor receptor and the AKT/phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate 3-kinase pathways (Table 11). Some of the tyrosine kinase inhibitors are approved for use in
the management of other tumors, and patients who do not have the ability to
participate in a clinical study are sometimes treated with these agents outside the
protocol [232].
9. Follow-Up of Patients with Thyroid Cancer
Most recurrences in patients with differentiated thyroid cancer occur within the
first five years after initial treatment, but recurrences may also occur several decades later [34] [53] [81]. Patients with papillary cancer usually recur locally and
regionally in the neck, while patients with follicular cancer recur more frequently in distant sites [34] [53] [81]. Spinal cancer can recur locally and regionally in
the neck or at distant sites [75] [53] [81]. The most common site of distant metastases for thyroid tumors are the lungs, bones, soft tissues, brain, liver, and
adrenal glands [34] [53] [81]. Pulmonary metastases are more common in young
patients, while bone metastases occur more often in older patients [81].
Follow-up consultations for patients with differentiated thyroid carcinoma
generally include a complete medical history, physical examination, blood tests
that include thyroglobulin, TSH, and a high resolution medial and lateral neck
ultrasound [81]. The complete physical examination and ultrasound of the medial
and lateral neck serve to detect local recurrences in the surgical bed or regional
lymph nodes in the neck [81]. Thyroglobulin values usually fall after thyroidectomy and ablation and serve as a sensitive indicator of recurrent or persistent
disease. However, it is important to keep in mind that the production of thyroglobulin depends on TSH; therefore, TSH levels may affect the sensitivity of thyroglobulin measurements in the detection of recurrent disease [34] [53] [81]. It
is important to remember that 25% of patients with differentiated thyroid cancer
have anti-thyroglobulin antibodies, which falsely reduce serum thyroglobulin
levels [81]. Thyroglobulin levels should always be interpreted in the context of
the status of anti-thyroglobulin antibodies [34].
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The NCCN and ATA guidelines recommend that during the initial follow-up,
measure serum thyroglobulin (with the patient taking levothyroxine) six to 12
months (ATA recommendation # 62) [34] [80]. Checking thyroglobulin levels
more frequently may be appropriate for patients at high risk of recurrence based
on the ATA classification [34]. Patients with a low to intermediate risk ATA
classification that achieve an excellent response to therapy, there is no evidence
on the usefulness of continuing with subsequent thyroglobulin intakes (ATA
recommendation # 62) [34]. The time interval between thyroglobulin measurements can be extended to at least every 12 to 24 months (ATA recommendation
# 62) [34]. Serum TSH levels should be measured at least every 12 months in all
patients receiving thyroid hormone therapy (ATA recommendation # 62) [34].
For patients with a high-risk ATA classification (regardless of treatment response) and all patients with incomplete biochemical response, an incomplete
structural response, or an undetermined response should continue to measure
thyroglobulin at least every 6 to 12 months for several years (ATA recommendation # 62) [34].
Patients with low to intermediate risk based on the classification of ATA who
have had remnant ablation or adjuvant therapy, and a negative neck ultrasound,
thyroglobulin should be measured at 6 to 18 months (with the patient taking levothyroxine) with one trial of sensitive thyroglobulin (<0.2 ng/ml) or after stimulation with TSH to verify the absence of disease (ATA recommendation # 63)
[34]. It is not recommended to repeat the TSH stimulated thyroglobulin test for
low to intermediate risk patients with excellent treatment response [34]. It may
be considered to obtain stimulated levels of thyroglobulin in patients with an
undetermined response, an incomplete biochemical response, or an incomplete
structural response after additional treatments have been performed or when a
spontaneous decrease in thyroglobulin levels is observed (with the patient being
treated with levothyroxine) over time to reassess the response to treatment (ATA
recommendation # 63) [34].
In patients who have undergone a thyroidectomy lower than the total (lobectomy) and in patients who have undergone total thyroidectomy but not ablation of the remnant with radioactive iodine it is recommended to obtain periodic
levels of thyroglobulin (with the patient being treated with levothyroxine) during
follow-up (ATA recommendation # 64) [34]. Although specific levels of thyroglobulin that optimally distinguish normal residual thyroid tissue from persistent
thyroid cancer are unknown, increasing levels of thyroglobulin over time are
suspected of a recurrence of the disease [34].
The NCCN and ATA guidelines recommend that during the initial follow-up,
high resolution medial and lateral neck ultrasound is used to evaluate the surgical bed and the central and lateral cervical ganglion compartments at 6 to 12
months after surgery, and then periodically, depending on the patient’s risk for
recurrent disease and the levels of thyroglobulin (ATA recommendation # 65)
[34] [80]. If a positive result would change the management of patients, suspicious ultrasound lymph nodes measuring ≥8 to 10 mm in the smallest diameter
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should have a BAAF to send cytology with a thyroglobulin measurement in the
lavage fluid of the needle [34]. Low-risk patients who have had remnant ablation, a negative neck ultrasound, and a low thyroglobulin (with the patient being
treated with levothyroxine) that was obtained from a sensitive trial (<0.2 ng/mL)
or after stimulation with TSH (thyroglobulin < 1 ng/mL) can be followed up
mainly with clinical examination and non-stimulated thyroglobulin levels (ATA
recommendation # 65) [34].
After the first full-body scan with post-treatment radioactive iodine (performed
after remnant ablation or adjuvant therapy), low-to-intermediate risk patients
with undetectable thyroglobulin (with the patient being treated with levothyroxine) without anti-antibody Thyroglobulin, and a negative neck ultrasound
(excellent response to treatment) do not require full-body scans with routine radioactive iodine during follow-up (ATA recommendation # 66) [34]. Full-body
scanning with radioactive iodine, after suspension of thyroid hormone or with
recombinant human TSH, 6 to 12 months after adjuvant therapy with radioactive iodine may be useful in monitoring patients with high or intermediate risk
of persistent or recurrent disease and should be performed with I123 or I131 of
low activity (ATA recommendation # 67) [34].
The use of 18FDG-PET should be considered in patients with high-risk thyroid cancer with elevated serum thyroglobulin levels (generally > 10 ng/ml) with
negative radioactive iodine studies (ATA recommendation # 68) [34].
The follow-up for patients with medullary thyroid cancer differs from that of
tumors of origin of the follicular epithelium (papillary and follicular cancer).
Therefore, the measurement of thyroglobulin has no role in the detection of recurrent disease in patients with spinal cancer. Instead, monitoring should consist
of measuring serum levels of calcitonin and carcinoembryonic antigen in addition to routine neck ultrasound. Serum levels of calcitonin and carcinoembryonic antigen should be measured three months after surgery, and if they are not
detected or are within the normal range, they should be measured every six
months for a year and then every year thereafter (recommendation # 46 of the
ATA) [75]. Patients with high levels of calcitonin in the postoperative period,
but less than 150 pg/ml should undergo a complete physical examination and
have a high resolution medial and lateral neck ultrasound (ATA recommendation # 47) [75]. If studies are negative, patients should be followed up with a
medical history and physical examination, measurement of serum levels of calcitonin and carcinoembryonic antigen, and neck ultrasound every six months
(ATA recommendation # 47) [75]. If serum levels of postoperative calcitonin
exceed 150 pg/ml, an evaluation should be performed with imaging studies, including an ultrasound of the neck, computed tomography of the chest, magnetic
resonance with contrast or computed tomography of the liver with three contrast phases, and bone scintigraphy and magnetic resonance imaging of the pelvis and axial skeleton (ATA recommendation # 48) [75]. In patients with serum
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omy, these markers should be measured at least every six months to determine
their doubling times (ATA recommendation # 49) [75].
For patients diagnosed with MEN 2A or 2B, annual examinations should be
performed to rule out the diagnosis of a pheochromocytoma (MEN 2A and
MEN 2B) and hyperparathyroidism (MEN2A) [75]. Anaplastic carcinoma and
lymphoma cannot be followed in the same way as patients with differentiated
thyroid cancer. Normally the protocol includes a medical history, physical examination, neck ultrasound, computed tomography or additional MRI, and
measurement of the carcinoembryonic antigen and LDH [81].
10. Conclusion
The striking increase in the prevalence/incidence of low-risk thyroid cancer over
the last 10 to 20 years has required a re-assessment of the conventional one-sizefits-all approach to differentiated thyroid cancer. This conversion to a more individualized management of the patient with thyroid cancer has led to a much
more risk-adapted approach to the diagnosis, initial therapy, adjuvant therapy,
and follow-up of patients with differentiated thyroid cancer. This has necessitated a complete re-appraisal of our management approach to the likelihood of
disease-specific mortality and the risk of structural/biochemical disease recurrence. During the last 10 years, there has seen significant adjustments to the
AJCC/TNM staging system, the elaboration and validation of the ATA risk stratification system for prognostication of disease recurrence, and the identification
and implementation of dynamic risk stratification to allow real-time, ongoing
re-evaluation of risk from initial detection to final follow-up. Contemporary
treatment of patients with thyroid malignancy requires a multidisciplinary approach involving an endocrinologist, a thyroid surgeon, a radiologist, and, on
occasion, medical and radiation oncologists. In selected patient’s radioactive
iodine therapy are usually effective for most patients with differentiated thyroid
cancer resulting in excellent long-term outcomes in most cases.
Conflicts of Interest
The authors declare no conflicts of interest regarding the publication of this paper.
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DOI: 10.4236/ijohns.2019.86024
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