Literature DB >> 1139493

The role of surgery in the management of thyroid cancer.

R A Mustard.   

Abstract

This is a review of one surgeon's personal experience with 85 patients with thyroid cancer treated over a 20-year period. The data confirm that for papillary thyroid tumours, with rare exceptions, the prognosis is excellent. Anaplastic lesions, however, are consistently lethal. Follicular carcinoma and medullary carcinoma fall between these extremes. A simple clinical classification is offered as a guide to operative management and a reliable index of prognosis. Patients with clinically apparent, "manifest cancer" have serious, life-threatening disease; many such patients die of their disease. Patients with "neck lumps not yet diagnosed" usually have papillary carcinoma; their prognosis is excellent. Patients whose thyroid tumours fall into the category of "malignant nodule" or "pathologist's cancer" are particularly fortunate: in this series no such patient has died. The importance of age in relation to thyroid cancer is also confirmed: non of the patients first treated before the age of 40 years has died of cancer. For young patients with favourable disease the author recommends conservative surgical treatment, which avoids cosmetic deformity or functional disability, to be followed by administration of levothyroxine to suppress production of thyroid=stimulating hormone. For patients with "unfavourable" thyroid cancer valuable palliation can often be achieved by a combination of surgery and irradiation. Survival rates for the total series are 76% at 5 years and 60% at 10 years.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1975        PMID: 1139493      PMCID: PMC1956501     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Can Med Assoc J        ISSN: 0008-4409            Impact factor:   8.262


  20 in total

1.  SURVIVAL OF PATIENTS WITH PAPILLARY CARCINOMA OF THE THYROID AFTER CONSERVATIVE OPERATIONS.

Authors:  G CRILE
Journal:  Am J Surg       Date:  1964-12       Impact factor: 2.565

2.  Treatment of cancer of the thyroid with desiccated thyroid.

Authors:  G CRILE
Journal:  Cleve Clin Q       Date:  1955-10

Review 3.  Medullary carcinoma of the thyroid.

Authors:  T R Corwin
Journal:  Surg Gynecol Obstet       Date:  1974-03

4.  Study of a kindred with pheochromocytoma, medullary thyroid carcinoma, hyperparathyroidism and Cushing's disease: multiple endocrine neoplasia, type 2.

Authors:  A L Steiner; A D Goodman; S R Powers
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  1968-09       Impact factor: 1.889

5.  Follicular carcinoma of the thyroid.

Authors:  H R Tollefsen; J P Shah; A G Huvos
Journal:  Am J Surg       Date:  1973-10       Impact factor: 2.565

6.  Proceedings: Differentiated thyroid carcinomas. Treatment of distant metastases.

Authors:  J K Harness; N W Thompson; J C Sisson; W H Beierwaltes
Journal:  Arch Surg       Date:  1974-04

7.  Long-term results in the treatment of carcinoma of the thyroid.

Authors:  R E Cline; W W Shingleton
Journal:  Am J Surg       Date:  1968-04       Impact factor: 2.565

8.  Treatment of papillary carcinoma of the thyroid with emphasis on conservative neck dissection.

Authors:  R A Mustard
Journal:  Am J Surg       Date:  1970-12       Impact factor: 2.565

9.  Management of patients with cancer of the thyroid. James Ewing Society Presidential Address, 1967.

Authors:  T Winship
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  1967-11       Impact factor: 6.860

10.  Pathological and clinical findings in a series of 67 cases of medullary carcinoma of the thyroid.

Authors:  E D Williams; C L Brown; I Doniach
Journal:  J Clin Pathol       Date:  1966-03       Impact factor: 3.411

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.