Literature DB >> 8130857

Childhood thyroid cancer. Characteristics and long-term outcome in children irradiated for benign conditions of the head and neck.

K Viswanathan1, T C Gierlowski, A B Schneider.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine the characteristics and long-term outcome of radiation-induced thyroid cancer in children.
DESIGN: Retrospective review of a cohort of 4296 irradiated patients who received childhood radiation treatment to the head and neck area at the same hospital. PATIENTS: Forty-one children who were younger than 20 years when thyroid cancer developed in them and 77 adults in whom thyroid cancer developed. All 118 cases were diagnosed before 1974 and were followed up for a median of 19.4 years.
RESULTS: Children presented with clinically palpable lymph nodes more often than adults (30.7% vs 15.1%, P = .05) and had more recurrences (39% vs 16%, P = .05). Despite these frequent recurrences, only one patient (an adult) died of thyroid cancer. Seventy percent of the recurrences occurred during the first 10 years of follow-up, but recurrences continued after 20 years. The adults had previously identified factors that predicted the risk of recurrences, but none could be identified in the children.
CONCLUSION: The presentation and relatively good outcome of radiation-induced thyroid cancer in children is similar to that in nonirradiated children. Frequent and late recurrences call for lifelong follow-up.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1994        PMID: 8130857     DOI: 10.1001/archpedi.1994.02170030030006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med        ISSN: 1072-4710


  7 in total

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Review 3.  Current strategies for surgical management and adjuvant treatment of childhood papillary thyroid carcinoma.

Authors:  Geoffrey B Thompson; Ian D Hay
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Review 4.  Thyroid nodules in pediatrics: which ones can be left alone, which ones must be investigated, when and how.

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5.  Clinical Implications of Age in Differentiated Thyroid Cancer: Comparison of Clinical Outcomes between Children and Young Adults.

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6.  Differentiated thyroid carcinoma of children and adolescents: 27-year experience in the yonsei university health system.

Authors:  Seulkee Park; Jun Soo Jeong; Haeng Rang Ryu; Cho-Rok Lee; Jae Hyun Park; Sang-Wook Kang; Jong Ju Jeong; Kee-Hyun Nam; Woong Youn Chung; Cheong Soo Park
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7.  Pediatric differentiated thyroid carcinoma in stage I: risk factor analysis for disease free survival.

Authors:  Nobuyuki Wada; Kiminori Sugino; Takashi Mimura; Mitsuji Nagahama; Wataru Kitagawa; Hiroshi Shibuya; Keiko Ohkuwa; Hirotaka Nakayama; Shohei Hirakawa; Yasushi Rino; Munetaka Masuda; Koichi Ito
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2009-09-01       Impact factor: 4.430

  7 in total

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