| Literature DB >> 23737785 |
Gabriella Pellegriti1, Francesco Frasca, Concetto Regalbuto, Sebastiano Squatrito, Riccardo Vigneri.
Abstract
Background. In the last decades, thyroid cancer incidence has continuously and sharply increased all over the world. This review analyzes the possible reasons of this increase. Summary. Many experts believe that the increased incidence of thyroid cancer is apparent, because of the increased detection of small cancers in the preclinical stage. However, a true increase is also possible, as suggested by the observation that large tumors have also increased and gender differences and birth cohort effects are present. Moreover, thyroid cancer mortality, in spite of earlier diagnosis and better treatment, has not decreased but is rather increasing. Therefore, some environmental carcinogens in the industrialized lifestyle may have specifically affected the thyroid. Among potential carcinogens, the increased exposure to medical radiations is the most likely risk factor. Other factors specific for the thyroid like increased iodine intake and increased prevalence of chronic autoimmune thyroiditis cannot be excluded, while other factors like the increasing prevalence of obesity are not specific for the thyroid. Conclusions. The increased incidence of thyroid cancer is most likely due to a combination of an apparent increase due to more sensitive diagnostic procedures and of a true increase, a possible consequence of increased population exposure to radiation and to other still unrecognized carcinogens.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23737785 PMCID: PMC3664492 DOI: 10.1155/2013/965212
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cancer Epidemiol ISSN: 1687-8558
Increase of thyroid cancer incidence rate in different countries.
| Country | Source | Years | Variation of incidence (APC) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Females | Males | ||||
| Australia | [ | 1982 | 2007 | — | 4.0 |
| Canada | [ | 1970/72 | 1994/96 | 3.5* | 3.2* |
| China (Shanghai) | [ | 1983 | 2000 | — | 2.6 |
| Denmark | [ | 1973/1977 | 1998/2002 | 81.3%‡ | 20.0%‡ |
| Finland | [ | 1973/1977 | 1998/2002 | 62.8%‡ | 29.4%‡ |
| France | [ | 1983 | 2000 | 8.98 | 8.13 |
| Israel-Jews | [ | 1973/1977 | 1998/2002 | 95.2%‡ | 34.6%‡ |
| Italy | [ | 1991/95 | 2001/05 | 145%‡ | 127%‡ |
| Japan | [ | 1973/1977 | 1998/2002 | 85.7%‡ | 52.4%‡ |
| Spain | [ | 1978 | 2001 | 9.4§ | 2.6§ |
| Switzerland | [ | 1973/1977 | 1998/2002 | 85.7%‡ | 5.3%‡ |
| UK |
| 1993 | 2008 | 2.3 | 0.6 |
| USA | [ | 1998 | 2005 | 7.0 | 6.3 |
APC: annual percent change.
*Average annual percent increase.
‡Percent temporal change (% increase) in the indicated period.
§Incidence increase in the indicated period.
Figure 1The trend in thyroid cancer incidence in the North American population from 1999 to 2008, subdivided by gender (a) and by disease stage at the time of diagnosis (b) (modified from Simard et al.) [11]. The trend in thyroid cancer incidence in the United States from 1980 to 2009 by histotype (c) (modified from Aschebrook-Kilfoy et al.) [20].
Thyroid cancer incidence is increasing worldwide: possible reasons.
| (A) The increase is apparent (not more cancers but more detection) | |
| (i) Widespread diffusion of advanced medical procedures | |
| (ii) The increased incidence concerns mainly microcarcinomas | |
| (iii) Increased detection of “incidental,” microcarcinomas because | |
| (1) total thyroidectomies for benign lesions are more frequent | |
| (2) pathological examinations are more detailed | |
| (3) incidental discovery of nodules at diagnostic examination for other diseases is frequent | |
| (iv) High frequency of undiagnosed, asyntomatic small thyroid cancers at autopsy | |
| (v) Improved accuracy of cancer registration | |
| (B) The increase is true (more cancers because of changes in the risk factors) | |
| (i) Large tumors are also increased | |
| (ii) The incidence of large size and advanced stage cancers is not decreased, as expected when early diagnosis is more frequent | |
| (iii) Only the papillary histotype of thyroid cancer is increased | |
| (iv) Increased incidence is not proportionally distributed for age and gender | |
| (v) Improved accuracy of cancer registration should have produced similar effects also for other tumors | |
| (vi) Mortality rate | |
| (1) stable mortality rate may result from early diagnosis and better treatment counteracting the effect of the increased cancer number | |
| (2) thyroid cancer progression is very slow and increased incidence would affect mortality only after decades | |
| (3) recent data indicate that mortality is increasing, specially in males |
Potential carcinogenic factors thyroid cancer.
| Factor | Source | |
|
| ||
| Exogenous | X-rays | Medical imaging (dental X-ray and CT scans) |
| 131I | Nuclear medicine procedures | |
| Iodine | Diet, iodine prophylaxis, BRAFV600E (?) | |
| Nitrate | Water and diet | |
| Westernized lifestyle and environmental | Undiscovered carcinogens | |
| pollutants | Bisphenol A (BPA), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCB), polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) | |
|
| ||
| Factor | Mechanism | |
|
| ||
| Endogenous | TSH | Thyroid growth stimulation |
| Autoimmune | increased TSH and oxidative stress | |
| Thyroiditis | ||
| Obesity and insulin resistance | Hyperinsulinemia promotes cancer, but this factor is not specific for the thyroid | |