| Literature DB >> 23426389 |
Wen-Bin Yu1, Yun-Tao Song, Nai-Song Zhang.
Abstract
Many low-risk patients with solitary papillary thyroid cancer located in one lobe had undergone surgery that was less extensive than hemithyroidectomy in China. An acceptable completion surgery regimen was suggested for these patients based on our experience. A total of 117 enrolled patients underwent completion surgery. Thirty-two patients had prior tumor resection, 46 patients had prior partial thyroidectomy and 39 patients had prior subtotal thyroidectomy. No neck dissection was performed. Reoperation was scheduled a median of 1.2 months (range, 3 days-6.5 months) after primary surgery for papillary thyroid cancer (PTC). Among the 117 patients, residual tumor was pathologically confirmed in 60 patients, with a residual rate of 51.28%. Among these 60 patients, residual tumor was identified in the thyroid bed alone in 18 patients and in compartment VI alone in 28 patients, while 14 patients exhibited residual tumor in both of these regions. Lymph node metastasis was observed in compartment VI in 42 patients (35.90%), and an average of 6.5 nodes were removed (range, 2-14 nodes for each patient). Additionally, 3.14 positive lymph nodes were removed on average from each of the 42 patients. We conclude that the completion regimen, including the ipsilateral residual lobe, the isthmus and ipsilateral compartment VI (prelaryngeal, pretracheal and paratracheal lymph nodes), is reasonable and acceptable for low-risk patients undergoing surgery that is less extensive than hemithyroidectomy.Entities:
Keywords: central compartment; lobectomy; papillary thyroid cancer
Year: 2012 PMID: 23426389 PMCID: PMC3576203 DOI: 10.3892/ol.2012.1100
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Lett ISSN: 1792-1074 Impact factor: 2.967
Characteristics of patients prior to completion surgery.
| Characteristics | No. (%) |
|---|---|
| Gender | |
| Female | 94 (80) |
| Male | 23 (20) |
| Initial surgery | |
| Tumor resection | 32 (27) |
| Partial thyroidectomy | 46 (39) |
| Subtotal thyroidectomy | 39 (34) |
| Lymph node dissection | |
| Compartment VI | 0 (0) |
| Other compartment | 0 (0) |
| Complications | |
| Recurrent laryngeal nerve damage | 17 (15) |
| Hypoparathyroidism | 0 (0) |
| TNM stage at initial surgery | |
| T1 | 43 (37) |
| T2 | 74 (63) |
| N0 | 0 (0) |
| N1 | 0 (0) |
Figure 1Surgical approach. (A) A low collar incision is conducted on the previous incision, with excision of the previous scar. (B) A subplatysmal dissection is elevated superiorly and inferiorly, elevating the neck flaps. (C) The carotid artery is dissected from the level of the thyroid cartilage down to the clavicle. (D) The infrahyoid strap musculature is inferiorly resected at the level of the sternal notch. (E) The recurrent laryngeal nerves are identified most inferiorly in the tracheoesophageal groove. (F) The nerves are meticulously microdissected from the clavicle up to the scar tissue region. (G) Pretracheal tissues are also dissected to connect with the residual lobe. (H) The infrahyoid strap musculature is resected superiorly at the level of the cricoid cartilage. (I) The lymph-fatty tissues in compartment VI, the ipsila teral residual lobe and the ipsilateral strap muscle are dissected according to the continuous en bloc principle.
Overall tumor residue.
| Location | No. (%) |
|---|---|
| Thyroid bed | 18 (30) |
| Compartment VI region | 28 (47) |
| Thyroid bed and compartment VI region | 14 (23) |