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Papillary microcarcinoma in comparison with larger papillary thyroid carcinoma in BRAF V600E mutation, clinicopathological features, and immunohistochemical findings
Author(s) -
Park Young Joo,
Kim Young A.,
Lee You Jin,
Kim Soon Hui,
Park So Yeon,
Kim Kyung Won,
Chung June Key,
Youn Yeo Kyu,
Kim Kwang Hyun,
Park Do Joon,
Cho Bo Youn
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
head and neck
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.012
H-Index - 127
eISSN - 1097-0347
pISSN - 1043-3074
DOI - 10.1002/hed.21142
Subject(s) - medicine , occult , thyroid carcinoma , immunohistochemistry , papillary carcinoma , v600e , papillary thyroid cancer , carcinoma , thyroid , pathology , metastasis , mutation , oncology , cancer , biology , gene , biochemistry , alternative medicine
Background. Papillary thyroid microcarcinoma (PMC; ≤1 cm) is thought to take a benign course during the lifetime. However, recent studies showed high recurrence rates for PMC.Methods. We analyzed the clinicopathological features, long‐term prognosis, and some molecular characteristics including BRAF V600E mutation by retrospectively reviewing the records of 1150 patients with papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC), 278 with PMC, and 868 with PTC >1 cm.Results. The prevalence of extrathyroidal invasion (52.2%) and initial nodal metastasis (34.9%) in patients with PMC was surprisingly high and almost as high as that for patients with PTC (72.4% and 51.8%, respectively). The rate of recurrent or persistent disease did not differ between patients with PMC and PTC (recurrent or persistent disease, 6.1% vs 14.1%; 53.4‐ vs 84.2‐month follow‐up; n = 98 vs 647; corrected p = .112). The frequency of BRAF V600E mutation was similar in patients with PMC and PTC (65.6% vs 67.2%). Immunohistochemical staining showed no different expression pattern according to the tumor size.Conclusion. These results suggest that PMC is not an occult cancer and it can act like larger PTC. Therefore, PMC should not be underestimated in practice. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Head Neck, 2010