| Literature DB >> 34194396 |
Anna M Sawka1, Sangeet Ghai2, George Tomlinson3, Nancy N Baxter4, Martin Corsten5, Syed Ali Imran6, Eric Bissada7, Rebecca Lebouef8, Nathalie Audet9, Maryse Brassard10, Han Zhang11, Michael Gupta12, Anthony C Nichols12, Deric Morrison13, Stephanie Johnson-Obeski14, Eitan Prisman15, Don Anderson15, Shamir P Chandarana16, Sana Ghaznavi17, Jennifer Jones18, Amiram Gafni19, John J Matelski20, Wei Xu21, David P Goldstein22.
Abstract
Background: The traditional management of papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) is thyroidectomy (total or partial removal of the thyroid). Active surveillance (AS) may be considered as an alternative option for small, low risk PTC. AS involves close follow-up (including regularly scheduled clinical and radiological assessments), with the intention of intervening with surgery for disease progression or patient preference.Entities:
Keywords: active surveillance; observational cohort study; papillary thyroid cancer; papillary thyroid microcarcinoma; prospective research; thyroidectomy
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34194396 PMCID: PMC8237853 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2021.686996
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Eligibility criteria.
| Participant Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria | |
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•Age 18 years or older |
•Thyroid cancer that is known to have extended beyond the thyroid (e.g. extrathyroidal extension, nodal or distant metastases) |
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•Newly diagnosed, untreated papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) < 2cm in maximal diameter on ultrasound imaging. The fine needle aspiration biopsy cytology of the primary tumor is required to be read as PTC or suspicious for PTC* |
•A history of prior thyroid surgery* |
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•Absence of metastatic cervical lymphadenopathy on imaging (ultrasound the neck or other) |
•The primary PTC is encroaching the recurrent laryngeal nerve or trachea (which is considered at potential high risk for invading these structures in the event of disease progression) |
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•No other absolute* indication for thyroid or parathyroid surgery at the time of the assessment |
•Proven or suspected poorly differentiated or non-papillary thyroid cancer |
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•Patient must grant permission for review of thyroid cancer-related medical records |
Medically unfit for surgery due to severe co-morbidity. Severe comorbidity may include another active malignancy with limited life expectancy of < 1 year* |
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•Pregnancy at the time of study enrollment | |
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•One or more absolute indications for thyroid or parathyroid surgery (other than thyroid cancer)* | |
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•Patient is unable or unwilling to consent for study follow-up procedures (e.g. due to current severe active cognitive or psychiatric impairment, substance abuse, or other reasons) | |
*Changes in the original Toronto protocol, approved by the University Health Network Research Ethics Board (April 7, 2020) and incorporated in the pan-Canadian at onset of the study include: not mandating central cytopathology review (i.e. may be performed at the discretion of the investigator if there is any uncertainty or concern about the original review, but not mandating this due to limited value with some patient delays observed in the Toronto study), not excluding patients who have mild thyroid or parathyroid disease that does not meet established absolute indications for surgical treatment (e.g. hyperthyroidism under control with medication, mild primary hyperparathyroidism), excluding patients with any prior thyroid surgery (not just thyroid cancer surgery, as prior partial thyroidectomy could confound results at long-term follow-up, although no patients with prior thyroid surgery have been enrolled in the Toronto study), and permitting patients who have had a recent diagnosis, treatment, or active surveillance of another malignancy to participate in the study if the expected survival of the other malignancy is > 1 year (as patients with other malignancies, including those under active surveillance for other low risk cancers, have expressed interest in this study).
Definition of disease progression.
| Definition of progression of papillary thyroid cancer under active surveillance for which salvage surgery is advised (one or more of the criteria listed below)* |
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| 1. Primary index PTC growth >3 mm (in the largest dimension), confirmed on two consecutive ultrasound exams. The 3 mm size cut off is considered reproducible ( |
| 2. Primary PTC growth in a location that is concerning (e.g. immediately adjacent to the trachea or in the course of the recurrent laryngeal nerve) ( |
| 3. Incident development of metastatic PTC to lymph nodes (confirmed on cytology or unequivocal imaging) |
| 4. Incident development of distant metastatic PTC (confirmed on imaging or biopsy or surgical histology) |
*Patients may choose to have surgery in absence of disease progression at any time point in follow-up.