| Literature DB >> 31093348 |
Lewis D Hahn1, Christian A Kunder2, Michelle M Chen3, Lisa A Orloff3, Terry S Desser1.
Abstract
Thyroid cancer incidence is rapidly increasing due to increased detection and diagnosis of indolent thyroid cancer, i.e. cancer that is likely to be clinically insignificant. Clinical, radiologic, and pathologic features predicting indolent behavior of thyroid cancer are still largely unknown and unstudied. Existing clinicopathologic staging systems are useful for providing prognosis in the context of treated thyroid cancer but are not designed for and are inadequate for predicting indolent behavior. Ultrasound studies have primarily focused on discrimination between malignant and benign nodules; some studies show promising data on using sonographic features for predicting indolence but are still in their early stages. Similarly, molecular studies are being developed to better characterize thyroid cancer and improve the yield of fine needle aspiration biopsy, but definite markers of indolent thyroid cancer have yet to be identified. Nonetheless, active surveillance has been introduced as an alternative to surgery in the case of indolent thyroid microcarcinoma, and protocols for safe surveillance are in development. As increased detection of thyroid cancer is all but inevitable, increased research on predicting indolent behavior is needed to avoid an epidemic of overtreatment.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Differentiated; Indolent; Molecular; Papillary; Surveillance; Thyroid; Ultrasound; microcarcinoma
Year: 2017 PMID: 31093348 PMCID: PMC6460732 DOI: 10.1186/s41199-016-0021-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers Head Neck ISSN: 2059-7347
TNM staging for differentiated cancers (papillary and follicular)
| Primary Tumor (T) | |
|---|---|
| TX | Primary tumor cannot be assessed |
| T0 | No evidence of primary tumor |
| T1 | Tumor 2 cm or less in greatest dimension limited to the thyroid |
| T1a | Tumor 1 cm or less, limited to the thyroid |
| T1b | Tumor more than 1 cm but not more than 2 cm in greatest dimension, limited to the thyroid |
| T2 | Tumor more than 2 cm but not more than 4 cm in greatest dimension limited to the thyroid |
| T3 | Tumor more than 4 cm in greatest dimension limited to the thyroid or any tumor with minimal extrathyroid extension (e.g., extension to sternothyroid muscle or perithyroid soft tissues) |
| T4a | Moderately advanced disease: Tumor of any size extending beyond the thyroid capsule to invade subcutaneous soft tissues, larynx, trachea, esophagus, or recurrent laryngeal nerve |
| T4b | Very advanced disease |
| Regional Lymph Nodes (N) | Regional lymph nodes are the central compartment, lateral cervical, and upper mediastinal lymph nodes. |
| NX | Regional lymph nodes cannot be assessed |
| N0 | No regional lymph node metastasis |
| N1 | Regional lymph node metastasis |
| N1a | Metastasis to Level VI (pretracheal, paratracheal, and prelaryngeal/Delphian lymph nodes) |
| N1b | Metastasis to unilateral, bilateral, or contralateral cervical (Levels I, II, III, IV, or V) or retropharyngeal or superior mediastinal lymph nodes (Level VII) |
| Distant Metastasis (M) | |
| M0 | No distant metastasis |
| M1 | Distant metastasis |
| Age less than 45 years | |
| Stage I | Any T Any N M0 |
| Stage II | Any T Any N M1 |
| Age greater than 45 years | |
| Stage I | T1 N0 M0 |
| Stage II | T2 N0 M0 |
| Stage III | T3 N0 M0 |
| Stage IVA | T4a N0 M0 |
| Stage IVB | T4b Any N M0 |
| Stage IVC | Any T Any N M1 |
Used with permission of the American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC), Chicago, Illinois. The original and primary source for this information is the AJCC Cancer Staging Manual, Seventh Edition (2010) published by Springer Science + Business Media
MACIS scoring and staging
| MACIS Score components | |
|---|---|
| Metastases | 3 if distant spread |
| Age | 3.1 (if age <40 years) or 0.08 × age (if age ≥ 40 year) |
| Completeness of Resection | 1 if incompletely resected, 0 otherwise |
| Invasion (local) | 1 if locally invasive, 0 otherwise |
| Size | 0.3 × tumor size (cm maximum diameter) |
| MACIS stage | MACIS score threshold |
| Stage 1 | <6 |
| Stage 2 | 6–6.99 |
| Stage 3 | 7–7.99 |
| Stage 4 | ≥8 |
Fig. 1High suspicion pattern. Transverse grayscale sonographic image of the thyroid at level of isthmus shows a hypoechoic, irregularly marginated thyroid nodule containing microcalcifications (arrow). This is a “high suspicion” sonographic pattern in the 2015 ATA guidelines, with an estimated risk of malignancy of >70–90%. Fine-needle aspiration of this nodule showed papillary thyroid carcinoma
Fig. 2Very low suspicion pattern. Transverse grayscale sonographic image of the thyroid at level of thyroid isthmus shows a nodule in the right lobe (arrow) with a “spongiform” pattern. Note the innumerable tiny cystic spaces characteristic of this pattern
Fig. 3Very low suspicion pattern. Transverse and longitudinal sonographic images of the right lobe of the thyroid show an echogenic nodule (arrow) against a background of hypoechoic, enlarged thyroid with curvilinear echogenic bands. These features of the background thyroid are characteristic of Hashimoto’s thyroiditis. The echogenic nodule is a benign “white knight” nodule, representing a regenerative nodule
Sonographic Patterns, Estimated Risk of Malignancy, and Fine-Needle Aspiration Guidance for Thyroid Nodules, reproduced from 2015 American Thyroid Association guidelines [14]
| Sonographic pattern | US features | Estimated risk of malignancy, % | FNA size cutoff (largest dimension) |
|---|---|---|---|
| High suspicion | Solid hypoechoic nodule or solid hypoechoic component of a partially cystic nodule with one or more of the following features: irregular margins (infiltrative, microlobulated), microcalcifications, taller than wide shape, rim calcifications with small extrusive soft tissue component, evidence of ETE | >70–90 | Recommend FNA at ≥1 cm |
| Intermediate suspicion | Hypoechoic solid nodule with smooth margins without microcalcifications, ETE, or taller than wide shape | 10–20 | Recommend FNA at ≥1 cm |
| Low suspicion | Isoechoic or hyperechoic solid nodule, or partially cystic nodule with eccentric solid areas, without microcalcification, irregular margin or ETE, or taller than wide shape. | 5–10 | Recommend FNA at ≥1.5 cm |
| Very low suspicion | Spongiform or partially cystic nodules without any of the sonographic features described in low, intermediate, or high suspicion patterns. | <3 | Consider FNA at ≥2 cm Observation without FNA is also a reasonable option |
| Benign | Purely cystic nodules (no solid component) | <1 | No biopsy |
Representative literature on sonographic prediction of thyroid cancer prognosis
| Author | Year | Number of cases and histologic subtype | Size range | Prognostic measure | Sonographic parameters studied | Selected results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cappelli et al. [ | 2007 | 484 PTC | <1.0 cm to > 4.0 cm | Recurrence of disease or death due to thyroidcancer | Blurred margins, presence of calcifications, intranodular vascularity, hypoechogenicity, multifocality, extracapsular growth | Among investigated sonographic parameters, only intranodular flow associated with unfavorable outcome |
| Du et al. [ | 2015 | 177 PTC | N/A | LN mets | Size, peak systolic velocity, pulsatility index, resistive index, multifocality, bilateral vs. unilateral, nodule border, edge irregularity, halo, solid/cystic vs. solid, uniformity of echogenicity, echogenicity, microcalcifications, flow grade, capsular invasion | Large size, percent contact with thyroid capsule, microcalcifications, flow grade 3–4 (graded from 0–4), resistive index >0.654, peak systolic velocity > 24.5 cm/s associated with LN mets. |
| Fukuoka et al. [ | 2015 | 480 PTC in 384 patients | <1.0 cm | Increase in tumor size ≥3 mm (prospective trial) | Calcification pattern, tumor vascularity | Macroscopic/rim calcifications and poor vascularity on most recent follow-up associated with non-progression of disease. These features were also strongly associated with advanced age. |
| Gweon et al. [ | 2016 | 397 PTC | 3–35 mm | ETE | Tumor composition, echogenicity, margins, calcifications, shape, TI-RADS category (Kwon classification), size | Size associated with ETE. |
| Kamaya et al. [ | 2015 | 62 PTC | >1.0 cm | ETE | Capsular abutment, contour bulging, vascularity beyond capsule, loss of echogenic capsule | Capsular abutment 100% sensitive for extracapsular extension |
| Kim et al. [ | 2011 | 354 PTC | ≤2 cm | ETE | Size, shape, margin, echogenicity, calcification, vascularity, contact with capsule | Size >0.5 cm, marked hypoechogenicity, contact with capsule associated with ETE. |
| Lai et al. [ | 2016 | 367 PTC | ≤1.0 cm | ETE | Size, shape, length/width ratio, border, peripheral halo, echogenicity, cystic change, calcification (any), vascularity, presence of Hashimoto’s thyroiditis | Size associated with LN mets and ETE. |
| Lee et al. [ | 2014 | 568 PTC | 3–49 mm | ETE | Size, lesion location, echogenicity, (LN stage), % abutment of thyroid capsule, capsular protrusion | Size, thyroid capsular protrusion, % abutment of thyroid capsule are all associated with ETE. |
| Zhan et al. [ | 2012 | 155 PTC | <10 mm to greater than 40 mm | LN mets | Size, shape, border, margin, halo, internal architecture, echogenicity, homogeneity of echotexture, calcification, contact between nodule border and thyroid, vascularity, peak systolic velocity, pulsatility index, resistive index | Size, contact percentage, combined microcalcifications/ macrocalcifications, increased vascularity, high resistive index difference associated with LN mets. |
PTC papillary thyroid carcinoma, ETE extrathyroidal extension, LN mets, LYMPH node metastases