Thyroid Cancer
Thyroid Cancer
Thyroid Cancer
SYMPTOMS
The most common presentation is thyroid
RISK FACTORS
(Goldman, 1996)
Family History
History of family member with medullary
thyroid carcinoma
History of family member with other
endocrine abnormalities (parathyroid,
adrenals)
History of familial polyposis (Gardners
syndrome)
Physical Exam
(continued)
Serum Calcium
Thyroglobulin (TG)
Calcitonin
Advantages :
Most sensitive procedure or identifying
Ultrasonography
(Continued)
Ultrasonography
(Continued)
Disadvantages
Unable to reliably diagnose true cystic lesions
Cannot accurately distinguish benign from malignant
nodules
procedure of choice
Performed with: technetium 99m
pertechnetate or radioactive iodine
Radioisotope Scanning
(Continued)
Radioactive
iodine
radioactive
Radioisotope Scanning
(continued...)
Limitations
Not as sensitive or specific as fine needle
aspiration in distinguishing benign from
malignant nodule
90%-95%
Radioisotope Scanning
(continued)
Specific
uses of thyroid
scanning:
Preoperative
evaluation
When
evaluation
Fine-Needle Aspiration
(continued)
FNA halved the number of patients requiring
thyroidectomy
do undergo thyroidectomy
Fine-Needle Aspiration
(continued)
Fine-Needle Aspiration
(continued)
Limitations
skill of the aspirator
Sampling error in lesions <1cm, >4cm, multinodular
lesions, and hemorrhagic lesions
Error can be diminished using ultrasound guidance
expertise of the cytologist
difficulty in distinguishing some benign cellular
adenomas from their malignant counterparts (follicular
and Hurthle cell)
Mechanism/Rationale
Exogenous thyroid hormone feeds back to the pituitary
to decrease the production of TSH
Cancer is autonomous and does not require TSH for
growth whereas benign processes do
Thyroid masses that shrink with suppression therapy
are more likely to be benign
Thyroid masses that continue to enlarge are likely to
be malignant
Thyroid Suppression
(continued)
Limitations:
16%
Thyroid Suppression
(continued)
Uses:
Preoperative
patients with nonoxyphilic follicular neoplasms
patients with solitary benign nodules that are nontoxic
(particularly men and premenopausal women)
women with repeated nondiagnostic tests
Postoperative
Thyroid Suppression
(continued)
How to use thyroid suppression
administer levothyroxine
maintain TSH levels at <0.1 mIU/L
use ultrasound to monitor size of nodule
if the nodule shrinks, continue L-thyroxine
maintaining TSH at low-normal levels
if the nodule has remained the same size after 3
months, reaspirate
if the nodule has increased in size, excise it
Classification of Malignant
Thyroid Neoplasms
Papillary carcinoma
Follicular variant
Tall cell
Diffuse sclerosing
Encapsulated
Follicular carcinoma
Overtly invasive
Minimally invasive
Medullary Carcinoma
Miscellaneous
Sarcoma
Lymphoma
Squamous cell carcinoma
Mucoepidermoid
carcinoma
Clear cell tumors
Pasma cell tumors
Metastatic
Direct extention
Kidney
Colon
Melanoma
common
Major
WDTC - Papillary
Carcinoma (Continued)
Microcarcinomas - a manifestation of papillary
carcinoma
spread
WDTC - Prognosis
Based on age, sex, and findings at the time of
surgery .
Several prognostic schemes represented by
acronyms have been developed by different
groups:
AMES
GAMES
AGES
WDTC - Prognosis
(Continued)
- death rate - 4%
WDTC - Prognosis
(Continued)
Medullary Thyroid
Carcinoma
10% of all thyroid malignancies
1000 new cases in the U.S. each year
Arises from the parafollicular cell or C-cells of
(Continued)
MTC (SMTC)
Familial MTC (FMTC)
Multiple endocrine neoplasia IIa (MEN IIa)
Multiple endocrine neoplasia IIb (MEN IIb)
Sporadic MTC:
70%-80%
of all MTCs
Mean age of 50 years
75% 15 year survival
Unilateral and Unifocal (70%)
Slightly more aggressive than FMTC and MEN IIa
74% have extrathyroid involvement at
presentation
Syndrome):
MTC, Pheochromocytoma, parathyroid hyperplasia
Autosomal dominant transmission
Mean age of 27
100% develop MTC
85%-90% survival at 15 years
Management
Surgery is the definitive management of thyroid
required
for a potentially malignant
thyroid nodule
total thyroidectomy - removal of all thyroid tissue
- preservation of the contralateral
parathyroid glands
subtotal thyroidectomy - anything less than a total
thyroidectomy
thyroidectomy
1)
Hypo
parathyroidism (1%-29%)
Recurrent laryngeal nerve injury (1%-2%)
Superior laryngeal nerve injury
2)
dependent cancer)
Postoperative management
disease
surveillance
serial
If
calcitonin rises
metastatic
work-up
surgical excision
if metastases - external beam radiation
Anaplastic Carcinoma
(Management)
Most have extensive extrathyroidal
ROLE OF EBRT
No prospective randomized trials have
residue
Positive margin
Cervical or mediastinal nodes
ECE of nodal disease
T3/T4 disease
After salvage surgery.
DosesPost-operative
dose 60-70Gy.
Persistent or reccurent cervical nodes
after surgery and RAI Total dose is
50Gy, followed by 10-16Gy boost to
gross adenopathy.
Mediastinal Tumors
Introduction
Silent in early phase
Mainly cause pressure symptoms
Incidentally discovered by routine x-rays
Specific disease entities according to
syndrome
Dysphagia
Pleural effusion
Stridor
Myathenia Gravis
Phrenic nerve palsy
Chylothorax
Diagnosis
Chest PA & Lateral
Chest CT
Fluoroscopy
Bronchoscopy
Esophagogram
Isotope Scanning
Angiography
Thoracotomy
VATS
Medistinoscopy
Thymoma
MASAOKA STAGING
STAGE I : Macroscopically completely
encapsulated,with no microscopic invasion.
STAGE II(a) : Macroscopic invasion into sorrounding
mediastinal fatty tissue or mediatinal pleura.
STAGE II(b) : Microscopic invasion into the capsule.
STAGE III : Macroscopic invasion into surrounding
organs.
STAGE IV(a) : Pleural or pericardial
implants/dissemination.
STAGE IV(b) : Lymphogenous or hematogenous
metastases.
Thymoma(Treatment)
Stage I : Surgical resection Recurrence 2-12%
Stage II & III : Surgery + Radiotherapy
Stage IV : Multimodality Induction chemotherapy,
Thymoma
Thymus
Lymphoma
Metastatic is most common
5-10% is mediastinal primary
Second moost common Anterior
Hodgkins Lymphoma
mediastinal widening
Adults, 24 % in children
1/5 is Malignant
Cystic Teratoma(Dermoid Cyst) vs. Solid tumor
(Teratoma)
Solid tumor : 1/3 malignant
Radiosensitive
Teratoma, Malignant teratoma,
Seminoma(dysgerminomas)
Thymic carcinoma
Thymic carcinoid.
Thymo-lipo sarcoma.
seminomatous and
non-seminomatous.
RT DOSE
Depends on status of surgical margin.
Close/clear margin-50Gy.
Microscopically positive margin-54Gy
Grossly positive margin-60Gy
Gross residue disease- 60-70Gy.
Thank you.