| Literature DB >> 35892901 |
Krzysztof Kaliszewski1, Maksymilian Ludwig1, Bartłomiej Ludwig1, Agnieszka Mikuła1, Maria Greniuk1, Jerzy Rudnicki1.
Abstract
Medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) is a neoplasm originating from parafollicular C cells. MTC is a rare disease, but its prognosis is less favorable than that of well-differentiated thyroid cancers. To improve the prognosis of patients with MTC, early diagnosis and prompt therapeutic management are crucial. In the following paper, recent advances in laboratory and imaging diagnostics and also pharmacological and surgical therapies of MTC are discussed. Currently, a thriving direction of development for laboratory diagnostics is immunohistochemistry. The primary imaging modality in the diagnosis of MTC is the ultrasound, but opportunities for development are seen primarily in nuclear medicine techniques. Surgical management is the primary method of treating MTCs. There are numerous publications concerning the stratification of particular lymph node compartments for removal. With the introduction of more effective methods of intraoperative parathyroid identification, the complication rate of surgical treatment may be reduced. The currently used pharmacotherapy is characterized by high toxicity. Moreover, the main limitation of current pharmacotherapy is the development of drug resistance. Currently, there is ongoing research on the use of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs), highly specific RET inhibitors, radiotherapy and immunotherapy. These new therapies may improve the prognosis of patients with MTCs.Entities:
Keywords: imaging; immunotherapy; laboratory diagnostic; lateral lymph node dissection; medullary thyroid cancer; multikinase inhibitors; nuclear medicine; parathyroid gland identification; systematic treatment; transoral thyroidectomy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35892901 PMCID: PMC9332800 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14153643
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.575
UICC TNM classification.
| T—Primary Tumor | T/N/M | Characterization |
|---|---|---|
| T1 | Tumor 2 cm or less in greatest dimension, limited to the thyroid | |
| T1a | Tumor ≤ 1 cm in greatest dimension, limited to the thyroid | |
| T1b | Tumor > 1 cm but ≤2 cm in greatest dimension, limited to the thyroid | |
| T2 | Tumor > 2 cm but ≤4 cm in greatest dimension, limited to the thyroid | |
| T3 | Tumor > 4 cm in greatest dimension, limited to the thyroid or with gross extrathyroidal extension invading only strap muscles (sternohyoid, sternothyroid or omohyoid muscles) | |
| T4a | Tumor extends beyond the thyroid capsule and invades any of the following: subcutaneous soft tissues, larynx, trachea, esophagus, recurrent laryngeal nerve | |
| T4b | Tumor invades prevertebral fascia or encasing the carotid artery or mediastinal vessels from a tumor of any size | |
| N—regional lymph nodes | ||
| N0 | No evidence of locoregional lymph node metastasis | |
| N1a | Metastasis to level VI (pretracheal, paratracheal and prelaryngeal/Delphian lymph nodes) or upper/superior mediastinum | |
| N1b | Metastasis in other unilateral, bilateral or contralateral cervical compartments (levels I, II, III, IV or V) or retropharyngeal | |
| M—distant metastasis | ||
| M0 | No distant metastasis | |
| M1 | Distant metastasis |
MTC staging system.
| Stage | T (Primary Tumor) | N (Regional Lymph Nodes) | M (Distant Metastasis) |
|---|---|---|---|
| I | T1a, T1b | N0 | M0 |
| II | T2, T3 | N0 | M0 |
| III | T1–T3 | N1a | M0 |
| IVA | T1–T3 | N1b | M0 |
| T4 | Any N | M0 | |
| IVB | T4b | Any N | M0 |
| IVC | Any T | Any N | M1 |
Comparison of the sensitivity of MTC detection.
| Diagnostics | Sensitivity | Annotations | |
|---|---|---|---|
| US | Primary tumor | 75–90% | Standard procedure |
| Lateral neck LN | 56% | ||
| Central neck LN | 6% | ||
| US + serum Ctn and CEA | Primary tumor | 95% | |
| CT | Overall | 77–85% | Standard procedure |
| LN | 82% | ||
| Liver | 87% | ||
| Bones | - | ||
| Lungs | 100% | ||
| MRI | Bones | 89–92% | Standard procedure |
| Liver | 76–89% | ||
| 18F-FDOPA-PET/CT | Overall | 45–93% | ATA 2015: not recommended |
| LN | 72% | ||
| Liver | 65% | ||
| Bones | 68% | ||
| Lungs | 14% | ||
| Lateral neck LN | 75% | ||
| Central neck LN | 28% | ||
| 68Ga-DOTA-TATE-PET/CT | Overall | 84% | New |
| Neck LN | 56–63% | ||
| Mediastinal LN | 100% | ||
| Liver | 9% | ||
| Bones | 100% | ||
| Lungs | 57–63% | ||
| 68Ga-DOTA-MGS5-PET/CT | Not enough data | New | |
| 68Ga-IMP288-PET/CT | Overall | 89–92% | New |
| LN | 98–100% | ||
| Liver | 98–100% | ||
| Bones | 87–92% | ||
| Lungs | 29–42% | ||
MTC: medullary thyroid cancer; CEA: carcinoembryonic antigen; Ctn: calcitonin; CT: computed tomography; LN: lymph nodes; MRI: magnetic resonance imaging; PET: positron emission tomography.
Procedure for the treatment of medullary thyroid carcinoma based on the calcitonin level, as recommended by ESMO.
| Calcitonin Level [pg/mL] | Procedure for MTC Treatment | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Neck US—Negative | Neck US—Positive | ||
| <20 | TT | TT + bilateral CCLND + dissection of involved levels | |
| 20–50 | TT +/− bilateral CCLND | ||
| 50–200 | TT + bilateral CCLND + ipsilateral LCLND * | ||
| 200–500 | TT + bilateral CCLND + bilateral LCLND * | TT + bilateral CCLND + dissection of involved levels + contralateral lymph node dissection | |
| >500 | M0 | M1 | |
| TT + bilateral CCLND + bilateral LCLND * | Range of surgery based on disease progression and symptoms | ||
* At least IIa, III, IV. TT: total thyroidectomy; CCLND: central compartment lymph node dissection; LCLND: lateral compartment lymph node dissection.