| Literature DB >> 35900783 |
Sasha R Howard1,2, Sarah Freeston3, Barney Harrison4, Louise Izatt5, Sonali Natu6, Kate Newbold7, Sabine Pomplun8, Helen A Spoudeas9, Sophie Wilne10, Tom R Kurzawinski11,12, Mark N Gaze13,14.
Abstract
This guideline is written as a reference document for clinicians presented with the challenge of managing paediatric patients with differentiated thyroid carcinoma up to the age of 19 years. Care of paediatric patients with differentiated thyroid carcinoma differs in key aspects from that of adults, and there have been several recent developments in the care pathways for this condition; this guideline has sought to identify and attend to these areas. It addresses the presentation, clinical assessment, diagnosis, management (both surgical and medical), genetic counselling, follow-up and prognosis of affected patients. The guideline development group formed of a multi-disciplinary panel of sub-speciality experts carried out a systematic primary literature review and Delphi Consensus exercise. The guideline was developed in accordance with The Appraisal of Guidelines Research and Evaluation Instrument II criteria, with input from stakeholders including charities and patient groups. Based on scientific evidence and expert opinion, 58 recommendations have been collected to produce a clear, pragmatic set of management guidelines. It is intended as an evidence base for future optimal management and to improve the quality of clinical care of paediatric patients with differentiated thyroid carcinoma.Entities:
Keywords: differentiated thyroid cancer; follicular thyroid cancer; paediatric cancer; papillary thyroid cancer; thyroid
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35900783 PMCID: PMC9513650 DOI: 10.1530/ERC-22-0035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Endocr Relat Cancer ISSN: 1351-0088 Impact factor: 5.900
Figure 1Guideline development process. GDG, Guideline Development Group; GRADE, Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluations (Guyatt ).
Genetic syndromes associated with differentiated thyroid cancer.
| Syndrome | Germline pathogenic variant and mode of inheritance | Type of thyroid cancer | Syndromic features noted on clinical examination | Further clinical features |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Multinodular | Macrocephaly (OFC >97th centile) and dolichocephaly, learning difficulties, autism and developmental delay, lipomas, vascular features including haemangiomas and arteriovenous malformations, gingival hypertrophy, oral papillomas, facial papules, acral keratoses, palmoplantar keratosis, trichilemmomas, pigmented macules of the glans penis and overgrowth of tissues. | Benign and malignant tumours of the breast, colon, endometrium and kidney, adult Lhermitte-Duclos disease due to cerebellar dysplastic gangliocytoma. | ||
| Familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) (includes Gardner syndrome and Turcot syndrome. These overlapping phenotypes are all known to be due to pathogenic | Papillary thyroid cancer including cribiform pattern subtype | Congenital hypertrophy of the retinal pigment epithelium (CHRPE), congenital absence of teeth, delayed eruption of teeth, dentigerous cysts, supernumerary teeth, odontomas, epidermoid cysts, fibrous dysplasia of the skull, mandibular osteomas, fibromas, desmoid tumours and pilomatrixoma. | Hepatoblastoma, medulloblastoma, multiple adenomatous polyps throughout the gastrointestinal tract, principally affecting the colon with high likelihood of malignant transformation, as well as upper GI tract adenomas and adrenal adenomas. | |
| Carney complex | Papillary thyroid cancer, follicular thyroid cancer and follicular adenoma | Pale brown to black lentigines of skin, lips and oral mucosa, soft tissue myxomas, schwannomas and epithelioid-type blue nevi. | Benign adrenal tumours (primary pigmented nodular adrenocortical disease), pituitary tumours (often somatotropinomas), large cell calcifying Sertoli cell tumours, breast ductal adenoma, osteochondromyxoma and Psammomatous melanotic schwannoma of the nerve sheath. | |
| DICER1 | Multinodular goitre and papillary thyroid cancer | None | Pleuropulmonary blastoma, ovarian Sertoli-Leydig cell tumours, cystic nephroma, ciliary body medulloepithelioma, botryoid-type embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma, nasal chondromesenchymal hamartoma, pituitary blastoma, pineoblastoma, Wilms tumour and juvenile intestinal hamartomas. | |
| Werner | Papillary thyroid cancer, | Short stature (lack of pubertal growth spurt), cataracts, premature aging, tight atrophic skin, ulceration, hyperkeratosis, pigmentary alterations, regional subcutaneous atrophy, and characteristic ‘bird-like facies’, hypogonadism, secondary sexual underdevelopment, premature greying and thinning of scalp hair, pes planus and abnormal voice. | Malignant melanoma, meningioma, soft tissue sarcomas, leukaemia and pre-leukaemic conditions of the bone marrow, primary bone neoplasms, osteoporosis, soft tissue calcification, evidence of premature atherosclerosis and diabetes mellitus. |
Figure 2British Thyroid Association 2014 classification ultrasound scoring of thyroid nodules. Reproduced, with permission, from Perros . Copyright 2014 John Wiley and Sons.
Royal College of Pathologists thyroid cytology reporting system.
| Thyroid 1 | Non-diagnostic for cytological diagnosis |
| Thyroid 1c | Cystic lesion |
| Thyroid 2 | Non neoplastic |
| Thyroid 2c | Non neoplastic, cystic lesion |
| Thyroid 3a | Neoplasm possible-atypia/non-diagnostic |
| Thyroid 3f | Neoplasm possible, suggesting follicular neoplasm |
| Thyroid 4 | Suspicious of malignancy |
| Thyroid 5 | Malignant |
Figure 3Calcium monitoring flowchart for total/completion thyroidectomy. CCa, corrected serum calcium; PTH, parathyroid hormone.
Comparison of risk stratification systems in British Thyroid Association (Perros ) and American Thyroid Association Paediatric (Francis ) guidelines for DTC.
| Risk group | BTA-adapted ATA guidelines | ATA Paediatric guidelines |
|---|---|---|
| Low risk | No local or distant metastases | Disease grossly confined to the thyroid with N0/Nx disease or patients with incidental N1a disease (microscopic metastasis to a small number of central neck lymph nodes) |
| Intermediate risk | Microscopic invasion of tumour into the perithyroidal soft tissues (T3) at initial surgery | Extensive N1a or minimal N1b disease |
| High risk | Extra-thyroidal invasion | Regionally extensive disease (extensive N1b) or locally invasive disease (T4 tumours), with or without distant metastasis |
Figure 4Decision-making flow chart for use of RRA, adapted from British Thyroid Association guidelines. RRA, radioiodine remnant ablation. Modified, with permission, from Perros . Copyright 2014 John Wiley and Sons.
Follow-up schedule for management of CYP with DTC.
| Baseline risk group | Dynamic risk assessment | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Excellent response | Indeterminate response | Incomplete response | |
| Low-risk | (a) 6–12 monthly follow-up. | (a) 6 monthly follow-up. | Consider further treatment in MDT depending on DRA findings. If active surveillance chosen over further treatment: |
| Intermediate risk | (a) 6 monthly follow-up. | (a) 6 monthly follow-up. | Consider further treatment in MDT. depending on DRA findings. If active surveillance chosen over further treatment: |
| High-risk | (a) 3–6 monthly follow-up. | (a) 3–6 monthly follow-up. | Consider further treatment in MDT depending on DRA findings. If active surveillance chosen over further treatment: |
DRA, dynamic risk assessment.