R Michael Tuttle1, Ali S Alzahrani2. 1. Endocrinology Service, Department of Medicine, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York. 2. Department of Medicine, King Faisal Specialist Hospital & Research Centre, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Abstract
CONTEXT: Modern management of differentiated thyroid cancer requires individualized care plans which tailor the intensity of therapy and follow-up to the estimated risks of recurrence and disease-specific mortality. EVIDENCE ACQUISITION: This summary is based on the authors' knowledge and extensive clinical experience supplemented by review of published review articles, thyroid cancer management guidelines, published staging systems, and original articles identified through a PubMed search which included terms such as risk stratification, staging, clinical outcomes, and differentiated thyroid cancer. EVIDENCE SYNTHESIS: In the past, risk stratification in differentiated thyroid cancer usually referred to a static estimate of disease-specific mortality that was based on a small set of clinicopathological features available within a few weeks of completing initial therapy (thyroidectomy with or without radioactive iodine). Today, risk stratification is a dynamic, active process used to predict the appropriateness for minimalistic initial therapy, disease-specific mortality, risk of recurrence, and the most likely response to initial therapy. Rather than being a static prediction available only after initial therapy, modern risk stratification is a dynamic, iterative process that begins as soon as a suspicious nodule is detected and continues through final follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: Dynamic risk assessment should be used to guide all aspects of thyroid cancer management, beginning before a definitive diagnosis is made and continuing through the final follow-up visit.
CONTEXT: Modern management of differentiated thyroid cancer requires individualized care plans which tailor the intensity of therapy and follow-up to the estimated risks of recurrence and disease-specific mortality. EVIDENCE ACQUISITION: This summary is based on the authors' knowledge and extensive clinical experience supplemented by review of published review articles, thyroid cancer management guidelines, published staging systems, and original articles identified through a PubMed search which included terms such as risk stratification, staging, clinical outcomes, and differentiated thyroid cancer. EVIDENCE SYNTHESIS: In the past, risk stratification in differentiated thyroid cancer usually referred to a static estimate of disease-specific mortality that was based on a small set of clinicopathological features available within a few weeks of completing initial therapy (thyroidectomy with or without radioactive iodine). Today, risk stratification is a dynamic, active process used to predict the appropriateness for minimalistic initial therapy, disease-specific mortality, risk of recurrence, and the most likely response to initial therapy. Rather than being a static prediction available only after initial therapy, modern risk stratification is a dynamic, iterative process that begins as soon as a suspicious nodule is detected and continues through final follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: Dynamic risk assessment should be used to guide all aspects of thyroid cancer management, beginning before a definitive diagnosis is made and continuing through the final follow-up visit.
Authors: R Michael Tuttle; Hernan Tala; Jatin Shah; Rebecca Leboeuf; Ronald Ghossein; Mithat Gonen; Matvey Brokhin; Gal Omry; James A Fagin; Ashok Shaha Journal: Thyroid Date: 2010-10-29 Impact factor: 6.568
Authors: Samantha K Newman; Victoria Harries; Laura Wang; Marlena McGill; Ian Ganly; Jeffrey Girshman; R Michael Tuttle Journal: Thyroid Date: 2021-12-03 Impact factor: 6.568
Authors: Mateus C Barros-Filho; Julia B H de Mello; Fabio A Marchi; Clóvis A L Pinto; Igor C da Silva; Patricia K F Damasceno; Milena B P Soares; Luiz P Kowalski; Silvia R Rogatto Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) Date: 2020-04-30 Impact factor: 5.555