Thyroid Neoplasms


Risk

  • Incidence in USA is 23,500 new thyroid cancer cases/y, but incidence is increasing.

  • Account for approximately 1% of new cancer diagnoses each y.

  • Hispanics, African Americans, lower rate; Caucasians, moderate rate; Japanese, Chinese, Hawaiian, Filipinos, higher rate.

  • Overall incidence 3× higher in women than in men; peaks in third and fourth decades of life.

Perioperative Risks

  • Large thyroid mass may produce airway compression, deviation, or vocal cord paralysis.

  • Decreased BP, decreased HR, asystole with manipulation of carotid sinus.

  • Postop complications: Phrenic nerve injury, pneumomediastinum, pneumothorax, tracheomalacia and tracheal collapse postextubation, hematoma or laryngeal edema leads to airway compromise; bilateral laryngeal nerve injury calls for tracheotomy; superior laryngeal nerve injury leads to aspiration.

  • Accidental removal and/or injury of parathyroid glands causes decrease in Ca 2+ .

Worry About

  • Occult pheochromocytoma: Bilateral lobe medullary thyroid cancer is associated with MEN IIA and IIB.

Overview

  • Four main types: Papillary (80–90%), follicular (5–15%), medullary (<5%), primary thyroid lymphoma (rare), and primary thyroid sarcomas (rare).

  • Prognosis of well-differentiated papillary cancer is excellent, especially for age <40 y with small tumors.

  • Prognosis worsens for large tumors with poorly differentiated, anaplastic histology.

  • Age at Dx, tumor burden, gender, extra-thyroidal invasion, and distant metastases are important prognostic factors.

  • Latest research defines subcellular and molecular prognostic factors through genetic studies.

  • BRAF mutation is the most common mutation in papillary thyroid cancer and is associated with disease aggressiveness and resistance to radioiodine treatment.

Etiology

  • Factors include previous radiation, dietary iodine deficiency, goitrogens (chemical or dietary), preexisting benign thyroid disease, and genetic factors (Gardner syndrome, Cowden disease).

  • Association between primary thyroid cancer and increased incidence of subsequent breast cancer.

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