Hemithyroidectomy versus total thyroidectomy in the intermediate-risk differentiated thyroid cancer: the Italian Societies of Endocrine Surgeons and Surgical Oncology Multicentric Study
- PMID: 34435312
- DOI: 10.1007/s13304-021-01140-1
Hemithyroidectomy versus total thyroidectomy in the intermediate-risk differentiated thyroid cancer: the Italian Societies of Endocrine Surgeons and Surgical Oncology Multicentric Study
Abstract
The surgical treatment of the intermediate-risk DTC (1-4 cm) remains still controversial. We analyzed the current practice in Italy regarding the surgical management of intermediate-risk unilateral DTC to evaluate risk factors for recurrence and to identify a group of patients to whom propose a total thyroidectomy (TT) vs. hemithyroidectomy (HT). Among 1896 patients operated for thyroid cancer between January 2017 and December 2019, we evaluated 564 (29.7%) patients with unilateral intermediate-risk DTC (1-4 cm) without contralateral nodular lesions on the preoperative exams, chronic autoimmune thyroiditis, familiarity or radiance exposure. Data were collected retrospectively from the clinical register from 16 referral centers. The patients were followed for at least 14 months (median time 29.21 months). In our cohort 499 patients (88.4%) underwent total thyroidectomy whereas 65 patients (11.6%) underwent hemithyroidectomy. 151 (26.8%) patients had a multifocal DTC of whom 57 (10.1%) were bilateral. 21/66 (32.3%) patients were reoperated within 2 months from the first intervention (completion thyroidectomy). Three patients (3/564) developed regional lymph node recurrence 2 years after surgery and required a lymph nodal neck dissection. The single factor related to the risk of reoperation was the histological diameter (HR = 1.05 (1.00-1-09), p = 0.026). Risk stratification is the key to differentiating treatment options and achieving better outcomes. According to the present study, tumor diameter is a strong predictive risk factor to proper choose initial surgical management for intermediate-risk DTC.
Keywords: Differentiated thyroid carcinoma; Hemithyroidectomy; Intermediate-risk differentiated thyroid cancer; Risk stratification; Surgery; Thyroid.
© 2021. Italian Society of Surgery (SIC).
References
-
- Davies LWH (2006) Increasing incidence of thyroid cancer in the United States, 1973–2002. JAMA 295(18):2164–2167 - DOI
-
- Kent WDHS, Isotalo PA, Houlden RL, George RL, Groome PA (2007) Increased incidence of differentiated thyroid carcinoma and detection of subclinical disease. CMAJ 177:1357–1361 - DOI
-
- Leenhardt LBM, Boin-Pineau MH, Conte Devolx B, Marechaud R, Niccoli-Sire P et al (2004) Advances in diagnostic practices affect thyroid cancer incidence in France. Eur J Endocrinol 150(2):33–39
-
- Pellegriti G, Frasca F, Regalbuto C et al (2013) Worldwide increasing incidence of thyroid cancer: update on epidemiology and risk factors. J Cancer Epidemiol. https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/965212 - DOI - PubMed - PMC
-
- Alvaro Sanabria, Luiz P Kowalski, Jatin P. Shah, Iain J. Nixon, Peter Angelos, Michelle D. Williams, Alessandra Rinaldo, Alfio Ferlito. (2019)Growing incidence of thyroid carcinoma in recent years: factors underlying overdiagnosis. Head Neck. Author manuscript; available in PMC
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
