Author:
Peluso Gaia,Masone Stefania,Campanile Silvia,Criscitiello Carmen,Dodaro Concetta,Calogero Armando,Incollingo Paola,Minieri Gianluca,Menkulazi Marsela,Scotti Alessandro,Tammaro Vincenzo,Jamshidi Ali Akbar,Pelosio Luigi,Caggiano Marcello,Carlomagno Nicola,Santangelo Michele L.
Abstract
Summary
Background
We evaluated the frequency of incidental papillary thyroid microcarcinomas (mPTC) in thyroidectomies performed for benign diseases, to better characterize this nosologic entity and to assess the best treatment.
Methods
Between 2009 and 2017, a total of 1777 patients underwent surgery for benign thyroid disease. Patients with preoperative undetermined or positive for malignancy cytology were excluded, as well as incidental thyroid cancer larger than 1 cm.
Results
Total thyroidectomy was performed in 1649 patients (92.7%) and hemithyroidectomy in 128 (7.2%). Papillary thyroid cancer, sized between 2–10 mm, was found in 89 patients (5%), which were all by definition microcarcinomas (mPTC). In 11 patients mPTCs were multifocal and in 7 bilateral. Just 6 patients received hemithyroidectomy and later underwent radical surgery without complications. No tumor-related morbidity or mortality was observed. The χ2 test showed a statistically significant association between mPTC and non-toxic multinodular goiter.
Discussion
In the literature, the rates of incidental mPTC vary, due to various factors such as histopathological examination and sampling numbers. Regarding surgical treatment, some authors support a “conservative” approach for the positive prognosis, but considering that it can be associated with mortality, lymph node recurrence and metastasis, its treatment is still controversial.
Conclusions
Our experience confirms that total thyroidectomy in multinodular goiter is a safe procedure, which ensures endocrine control and oncologic complete tumor resection, in case of mPTC. In uninodular goiter, we recommend hemithyroidectomy; if mPTC is discovered, we suggest radical surgery especially in patients older than 50 years and with familial disposition for thyroid cancer and peripheral tumors larger than 5 mm and aggressive variants.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference25 articles.
1. Miccoli P, Minuto MN, Galleri D, et al. Incidental thyroid carcinoma in a large series of consecutive patients operated on for benign thyroid disease. ANZ J Surg. 2006;76(3):123–6. Mar.
2. Williams ED, Sobin LH. Who histological classification of thyroid tumors: a commentary on the second edition. Cancer. 1989;63(5):908–11.
3. Gelmini R, Franzoni C, Pavesi E, et al. Incidental thyroid carcinoma (itc): a retrospective study in a series of 737 patients treated for benign disease. Ann Ital Chir. 2010;81(6):421–7.
4. Antonelli W. Occult thyroid microcarcinomas in benign thyroid disease. Prev Res. 2016;5(4):130–3. https://doi.org/10.11138/Per/2016.5.4.130.
5. Chow SM, Law SC, Chan JK, et al. Papillary microcarcinoma of the thyroid-prognostic significance of lymph node metastasis. Cancer. 2003;98:31–40.
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献