| Literature DB >> 33153139 |
Noor Addasi1, Abbey Fingeret2, Whitney Goldner1.
Abstract
Thyroid cancer incidence is on the rise; however, fortunately, the death rate is stable. Most persons with well-differentiated thyroid cancer have a low risk of recurrence at the time of diagnosis and can expect a normal life expectancy. Over the last two decades, guidelines have recommended less aggressive therapy for low-risk cancer and a more personalized approach to treatment of thyroid cancer overall. The American Thyroid Association (ATA) and National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) thyroid cancer guidelines recommend hemithyroidectomy as an acceptable surgical treatment option for low-risk thyroid cancer. Given this change in treatment paradigms, an increasing number of people are undergoing hemithyroidectomy rather than total or near-total thyroidectomy as their primary surgical treatment of thyroid cancer. The postoperative follow-up of hemithyroidectomy patients differs from those who have undergone total or near-total thyroidectomy, and the long-term monitoring with imaging and biomarkers can also be different. This article reviews indications for hemithyroidectomy, as well as postoperative considerations and management recommendations for those who have undergone hemithyroidectomy.Entities:
Keywords: hemithyroidectomy; lobectomy; management; thyroid cancer; treatment
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33153139 PMCID: PMC7692138 DOI: 10.3390/medicina56110586
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.430
American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) Eighth Edition staging of differentiated thyroid cancer. T, tumor; N, node; M, metastasis.
| Age at Diagnosis | T | N | M | Stage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Any T | Any N | M0 | I |
| Any T | Any N | M1 | II | |
|
| T1 | N0/Nx | M0 | I |
| T1 | N1 | M0 | II | |
| T2 | N0/Nx | M0 | I | |
| T2 | N1 | M0 | II | |
| T3a/T3b | Any N | M0 | II | |
| T4a | Any N | M0 | III | |
| T4b | Any N | M0 | IVA | |
| any T | any N | M1 | IVB |
Adapted from [24], with permission from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., 2020.
Initial American Thyroid Association (ATA) risk of recurrence classification.
| Low Risk | Intermediate Risk | High Risk |
|---|---|---|
| All the following are present: |
Reproduced from [25], with permission from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., 2020.
Thyroglobulin thresholds for response to therapy and thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) targets for each category. RAI, radioactive iodine.
| Response to Therapy | Post Total Thyroidectomy with RAI Ablation | Post Total Thyroidectomy without RAI Ablation | Post Hemithyroidectomy | TSH Goals |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Nonstimulated Tg < 0.2 * or stimulated Tg < 1 * and negative imaging | Nonstimulated Tg < 0.2 * or stimulated Tg < 2 * and negative imaging | Nonstimulated Tg < 30 * | 0.5–2.0 |
|
| Nonspecific findings on imaging studies or | Nonspecific findings on imaging studies or | Nonspecific findings on imaging studies or stable/declining TgAb levels | 0.1–0.5 |
|
| Structural evidence of disease | Structural evidence of disease | Structural evidence of disease | 0.1–0.5 |
|
| Nonstimulated Tg > 1 or stimulated Tg > 10 or increasing TgAb levels and negative imaging | Nonstimulated Tg > 5 or stimulated Tg > 10 or increasing TgAb levels and negative imaging | Nonstimulated thyroglobulin > 30 | <0.1 |
Tg (ng/mL), TSH (mIU/L); * with undetectable TgAb. Adapted from [34], with permission from Elsevier, 2020.
The diagnostic criteria for noninvasive follicular thyroid neoplasm with papillary-like nuclear features (NIFTP).
| Diagnostic Criteria | Cytomorphology | Histology |
|---|---|---|
| Inclusion criteria for diagnosis of NIFTP | -Predominance of microfollicles | -Predominantly follicular pattern |
| Exclusion criteria for diagnosis of NIFTP | -Tall cell or columnar cell features | ->30% solid, insular, or trabecular pattern |
Reproduced from [39], with permission from Springer Nature, 2020.