Literature DB >> 8080485

Diagnosis, treatment, and outcome of follicular thyroid carcinoma.

G T Emerick1, Q Y Duh, A E Siperstein, G N Burrow, O H Clark.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: There have been numerous studies concerning the diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis of patients with papillary thyroid carcinoma, but relatively few addressing patients with follicular carcinoma.
METHODS: The authors analyzed their experience with 65 patients who underwent 96 thyroid operations for pure follicular thyroid carcinoma from 1956 to 1990.
RESULTS: The patients were 43 women and 22 men with a mean age of 45 years who were followed postoperatively for a mean of 10.4 years. Fifty-two patients (80%) were seen initially with a solitary thyroid nodule, and 24 (37%) had symptoms at presentation. Median tumor size was 2.2 cm. Fine-needle aspiration biopsy was performed in 20 patients, revealing a follicular neoplasm in 18 patients (90%) and an inadequate specimen in 2 patients. Nineteen patients received thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH)-suppressive thyroid hormone therapy for an average of 4.5 months before surgery; tumor size remained the same in 10 patients (53%), increased in 5 (26%), and decreased in 2 (11%). At presentation, six patients had lymph node involvement, three had locally invasive tumors, and two had distant metastases. Initial operative treatment was lobectomy in 32 patients (49%), total thyroidectomy in 15 patients (23%), lobectomy plus contralateral partial or subtotal lobectomy in 11 patients (17%), and lesser procedures in 7 patients (11%). Twenty-nine patients had a completion total thyroidectomy, so that final surgical treatment consisted of total thyroidectomy in 44 patients (68%). Among 39 patients having intraoperative frozen section, only 3 (8%) were correctly diagnosed as having cancer. Permanent complications occurred during 3 of the 96 operations. Three patients (5%) have died of thyroid cancer (one with anaplastic transformation) since thyroidectomy, and two are living with distant metastatic disease.
CONCLUSIONS: Patients with follicular thyroid cancer, when first examined, usually have solitary thyroid nodules that are follicular neoplasms by aspiration cytology, and these nodules fail to regress in response to TSH-suppressive therapy. Frozen section rarely aids in management. The preferred treatment for follicular neoplasms is lobectomy followed by completion total thyroidectomy for histologically proven carcinomas larger than 1.0 cm. Total thyroidectomy allows use of thyroglobulin and radioiodine scanning to detect and treat metastatic disease. Complications of thyroidectomy were uncommon, and the mortality rate in treated patients was relatively low.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8080485     DOI: 10.1002/1097-0142(19931201)72:11<3287::aid-cncr2820721126>3.0.co;2-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer        ISSN: 0008-543X            Impact factor:   6.860


  23 in total

Review 1.  Current controversies and future directions in the diagnosis and management of differentiated thyroid cancers.

Authors:  Timothy M Ullmann; Katherine D Gray; Maureen D Moore; Rasa Zarnegar; Thomas J Fahey
Journal:  Gland Surg       Date:  2018-10

Review 2.  Our approach to follicular-patterned lesions of the thyroid.

Authors:  Zubair W Baloch; Virginia A LiVolsi
Journal:  J Clin Pathol       Date:  2006-06-23       Impact factor: 3.411

Review 3.  Predictors of thyroid tumor aggressiveness.

Authors:  O H Clark
Journal:  West J Med       Date:  1996-09

4.  Minimally invasive follicular thyroid carcinoma.

Authors:  C S Heffess; L D Thompson
Journal:  Endocr Pathol       Date:  2001       Impact factor: 3.943

Review 5.  [Minimally invasive follicular thyroid carcinoma : Not always total thyroidectomy].

Authors:  M Hermann; K Tonninger; F Kober; E-M Furtlehner; A Schultheis; N Neuhold
Journal:  Chirurg       Date:  2010-07       Impact factor: 0.955

6.  Management of thyroid cancers.

Authors:  Devendra A Chaukar; Anuja D Deshmukh; Mitali R Dandekar
Journal:  Indian J Surg Oncol       Date:  2010-11-21

7.  Thyroid follicular carcinoma presenting as skull and dural metastasis mimicking a meningioma: a case report.

Authors:  Lesly Portocarrero-Ortiz; Rabindranath Garcia-Lopez; Samuel Romero-Vargas; Javier Avendaño-Mendez Padilla; Juan L Gómez-Amador; Citlaltépetl Salinas-Lara; Martha Lilia Tena-Suck; Arturo Sotomayor González
Journal:  J Neurooncol       Date:  2009-05-17       Impact factor: 4.130

8.  [Need for thyroidectomy in differentiated thyroid cancers].

Authors:  S Samel; C Käufer
Journal:  Langenbecks Arch Chir       Date:  1995

9.  Minimally invasive follicular thyroid cancer (MIFTC)--a consensus report of the European Society of Endocrine Surgeons (ESES).

Authors:  Gianlorenzo Dionigi; Jean-Louis Kraimps; Kurt Werner Schmid; Michael Hermann; Sien-Yi Sheu-Grabellus; Pierre De Wailly; Anthony Beaulieu; Maria Laura Tanda; Fausto Sessa
Journal:  Langenbecks Arch Surg       Date:  2014-02       Impact factor: 3.445

10.  [Prognostic factors and the effect of radiotherapy in the treatment of differentiated thyroid carcinomas].

Authors:  I A Adamietz; M S Schiemann; J G Petkauskas; F Schemmann; H D Böttcher
Journal:  Strahlenther Onkol       Date:  1998-12       Impact factor: 3.621

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