Deaths due to differentiated thyroid cancer: A 46‐year perspective
Author(s) -
Harness Jay K.,
McLeod Michael K.,
Thompson Norman W.,
Noble Walter C.,
Burney Richard E.
Publication year - 1988
Publication title -
world journal of surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.115
H-Index - 148
eISSN - 1432-2323
pISSN - 0364-2313
DOI - 10.1007/bf01655866
Subject(s) - medicine , thyroid cancer , follicular thyroid cancer , papillary thyroid cancer , neck dissection , thyroid carcinoma , cancer , thyroid , radiation therapy , thyroidectomy , metastasis , oncology , surgery , gastroenterology
From 1940 to 1986, a total of 798 patients were treated for differentiated thyroid carcinoma. One hundred and seventy‐two patients died during the follow‐up period: 42 (24.4%) patients from thyroid cancer, 14 (8.1%) from other causes with extensive thyroid cancer present, 75 (43.6%) with no thyroid cancer, and 41 (23.8%) with an unknown status of thyroid cancer . Of the 42 patients dying due to thyroid cancer, 15 were male and 27, female. Mean age at diagnosis was 48.3±17.7 years with one‐third of patients age 45 or younger at the time of the initial diagnosis. The primary tumors were large (>4 cm) and 59.5% of the patients had local invasion and/or cervical metastasis. Distant metastases were present in 9 (21.4%) patients at the time of diagnosis . Surgical therapy included total thyroidectomy (72.1%) and limited or radical neck dissection (69.4%). Radioactive iodine ( 131 I) was used to treat residual cancer and/or distant metastasis in 73.8% of the patients. External radiation therapy was used to treat locally advanced or recurrent disease in 52.3% of the patients. Distant metastases and local recurrence were identified earlier in patients with follicular thyroid cancer whose survival time and disease‐free interval were significantly shorter ( p < 0.001) than that of patients with papillary neoplasms. However, the survival and disease‐free intervals were often very long in both papillary and follicular thyroid cancer deaths . Onset of differentiated thyroid cancer before the age of 40 years does not preclude serious sequelae and death. Since no known histopathologic features can consistently predict outcome, we continue to advocate aggressive treatment of all patients with differentiated thyroid cancer .
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