Literature DB >> 33662333

Thyroid cancer incidence trends by histology in 25 countries: a population-based study.

Adalberto Miranda-Filho1, Joannie Lortet-Tieulent2, Freddie Bray2, Bochen Cao3, Silvia Franceschi4, Salvatore Vaccarella5, Luigino Dal Maso4.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The incidence of thyroid cancer has increased in different populations worldwide in the past 30 years. We present here an overview of international trends of thyroid cancer incidence by major histological subtypes.
METHODS: We did a population-based study with data for thyroid cancer incidence collected by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) for the period 1998-2012. Data were extracted from the Cancer Incidence in Five Continents plus compendium. We selected data for 25 countries that had a population of more than 2 million individuals covered by cancer registration (87 registries in total). Further criteria were that the selected registration areas had to have a proportion of unspecified thyroid cancer of less than 10% and analyses were restricted to individuals aged 20-84 years. We calculated age-specific incidence rates and age-standardised rates per 100 000 person-years for individuals aged 20 to 84 years, and assessed trends by country, sex, and major histological subtype (papillary, follicular, medullary, or anaplastic) based on absolute changes in age-standardised incidence rates between 1998-2002 and 2008-12.
FINDINGS: Papillary thyroid cancer was the main contributor to overall thyroid cancer in all the studied countries, and was the only histological subtype that increased systematically in all countries, although with large variability between countries. In women, the age-standardised incidence rate of papillary thyroid cancer during 2008-12 ranged from 4·3-5·3 cases per 100 000 person-years in the Netherlands, the UK, and Denmark, to 143·3 cases per 100 000 women in South Korea. For men during the same period, the age-standardised incidence rates of papillary thyroid cancer per 100 000 person-years ranged from 1·2 cases per 100 000 in Thailand to 30·7 cases per 100 000 in South Korea. In many countries in Asia, the increase in papillary thyroid cancer rates in women was particularly pronounced after the year 2000; rates stabilised since around 2009 in the USA, Austria, Croatia, Germany, Slovenia, Spain, Lithuania, and Bulgaria. Temporal trends for follicular and medullary thyroid cancer did not show consistent patterns across countries, but slight decreases were seen for anaplastic thyroid cancer in 21 of 25 countries between 1998-2002, and 2008-12. In 2008-12, age-standardised rates for the follicular subtype ranged between 0·5 and 2·5 cases per 100 000 women (and between 0·3 and 1·5 per 100 000 men), while those for the medullary subtype were always less than 1 case per 100 000 women or men, and for anaplastic thyroid cancer less than 0·2 cases per 100 000 women or men.
INTERPRETATION: In the period from 1998 to 2012, the rapid increases in thyroid cancer incidence were observed only for papillary thyroid cancer, the subtype more likely to be found in a subclinical form and therefore detected by intense scrutiny of the thyroid gland. FUNDING: French Institut National du Cancer, Italian Association for Cancer Research, Italian Ministry of Health.
Copyright © 2021 World Health Organization. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.

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Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33662333     DOI: 10.1016/S2213-8587(21)00027-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol        ISSN: 2213-8587            Impact factor:   32.069


  51 in total

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2.  Nomograms Based on Serum N-glycome for Diagnosis of Papillary Thyroid Microcarcinoma and Prediction of Lymph Node Metastasis.

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4.  Construction of a Signature Model to Predict the Radioactive Iodine Response of Papillary Thyroid Cancer.

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5.  Comparative evaluation of somatostatin and CXCR4 receptor expression in different types of thyroid carcinoma using well-characterised monoclonal antibodies.

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Review 6.  Hobnail Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma, A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

Authors:  Ariadni Spyroglou; Georgios Kostopoulos; Sofia Tseleni; Konstantinos Toulis; Konstantinos Bramis; George Mastorakos; Manousos Konstadoulakis; Kyriakos Vamvakidis; Krystallenia I Alexandraki
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-06-03       Impact factor: 6.575

7.  Radiofrequency ablation for management of thyroid nodules in quarantine zone of COVID-19 pandemic setting in Indonesia.

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Journal:  Ann Med Surg (Lond)       Date:  2022-07-12

8.  A nested case-control study of serum polychlorinated biphenyls and papillary thyroid cancer risk among U.S. military service members.

Authors:  Haoran Zhuo; Huang Huang; Andreas Sjodin; Lan Jin; Shuangge Ma; Hristina Denic-Roberts; Joshua L Warren; Richard Jones; Mark Davis; Peiyuan Sun; Herbert Yu; Mary H Ward; Robert Udelsman; Yawei Zhang; Jennifer A Rusiecki
Journal:  Environ Res       Date:  2022-05-02       Impact factor: 8.431

9.  Preoperative platelet distribution width-to-platelet ratio combined with serum thyroglobulin may be objective and popularizable indicators in predicting papillary thyroid carcinoma.

Authors:  Jin Jin; Guihua Wu; Chengwei Ruan; Hongwei Ling; Xueman Zheng; Changjiang Ying; Ying Zhang
Journal:  J Clin Lab Anal       Date:  2022-04-20       Impact factor: 3.124

10.  Updated Incidence of Thyroid Cancer in the North East Region of Romania after 35 Years of Chernobyl Fallout. Is There a Link between?

Authors:  Laura Teodoriu; Maria Christina Ungureanu; Letitia Leustean; Cristina Preda; Delia Ciobanu; Irena Grierosu; Mioara Matei; Roxana Iacob; Cipriana Stefanescu
Journal:  Diagnostics (Basel)       Date:  2021-05-19
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