Thyroid nodule resident survival guide
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Mahshid Mir, M.D. [2]
Thyroid nodule Resident Survival Guide Microchapters |
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Overview |
Classification |
Causes |
FIRE |
Diagnosis |
Treatment |
Do's |
Don'ts |
Overview
Thyroid nodules are a common clinical problem, and differentiated thyroid cancer is becoming increasingly prevalent. The American Thyroid Association has published guidelines for the management of thyroid nodules, which were updated in 2015.
Classification
The various classification systems for thyroid nodules can be summarized as follows:
Thyroid nodule classification | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bethesda classification system | TIRAD classification system | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Based on thyroid cytopathology | Based on sonographic features | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
•Benign •Nondiagnostic or Unsatisfactory •Follicular lesion of undetermined significance •Atypia of undetermined significance •Follicular neoplasm •Suspicious for a follicular neoplasm •Malignant | •TIRADS 1=Normal thyroid gland •TIRADS 2=Benign lesions •TIRADS 3=Probably benign lesions •TIRADS 4= Contain 1-4 suspicious features •TIRADS 5=Contain all five suspicious features •TIRADS 6=Biopsy proven malignancy | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Differentiated and anaplastic thyroid carcinoma | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
TNM staging AJCC UICC 2017 | Classification based on their origin | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
•Primary tumor (T) •Regional lymph nodes (N) •Distant metastasis (M) | Nonmedullary (epithelial) thyroid cancers (NMTCs) •Papillary cell tumors •Follicular tumors •Hurthle cell tumors •Anaplastic tumors | Medullary thyroid cancers | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Causes
Life-threatening causes
The most important genes which can lead to thyroid cancer include:[1][2][3]
Causes of malignant nodule mutations:
- Childhood radioiodine exposure
- Familial history
Common causes
The most important causes of thyroid nodule development include:[4][5][6]
- Causes of benign thyroid nodule:
- Multinodular (sporadic) goiter ("colloid adenoma")
- Hashimoto's (chronic lymphocytic) thyroiditis
- Cysts (colloid, simple, or hemorrhagic)
- Follicular adenomas
- Macrofollicular adenomas
- Microfollicular or cellular adenomas
- Hürthle cell (oxyphil cell) adenomas
- Macro- or microfollicular patterns
A Complete Diagnostic Approach and Management
Abbreviations:
TSH: Thyroid stimulating hormone, FNA: Fine needle aspiration, FLUS: Follicular lesion of undetermined significance, AUS: Atypia of undetermined significance.
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Do's
Thyroglobulin level monitoring
- Order serum Tg periodically during follow-up of patients with differentiated thyroid cancer who have undergone less than total thyroidectomy
- Order serum Tg periodically during follow-up of patients with differentiated thyroid cancer who have had a total thyroidectomy but not radioactive iodine ablation
Cervical ultrasound
- Perform cervical ultrasound to evaluate thyroid 6–12 months following surgery
18FDG-PET scanning
- Consider 18FDG-PET scanning in high-risk differentiated thyroid cancer patients with elevated serum Tg (generally >10 ng/mL) and negative radioactive iodine imaging
CT scans
- Order chest CT scan with or without IV contrast in high-risk differentiated thyroid cancer patients with elevated serum Tg (generally >10 ng/mL) or rising Tg antibodies with or without negative radioactive iodine imaging
TSH range
- Maintain serum TSH below 0.1 mU/L in patients with a structural incomplete response to therapy, indefinitely in the absence of specific contraindications
- Maintain serum TSH between 0.5-2 mU/L in patients with an excellent or indeterminate response to therapy, especially those at low risk for recurrence
Surgery for nodal disease
- Perform surgery in patients with clinically apparent, macroscopic nodal disease
- Perform therapeutic compartmental central and/or lateral neck dissection in a previously operated compartment, in patients with biopsy-proven persistent or recurrent disease for central neck nodes ≥8 mm and lateral neck nodes ≥10 mm
- Perform compartmental surgery
- When technically feasible, surgery for aerodigestive invasive disease is recommended in combination with RAI and/or EBRT.
- For tumors that invade the upper aerodigestive tract, surgery combined with additional therapy such as 131I and/or external beam radiation therapy is generally advised
- Patients receiving therapeutic doses of RAI should have baseline complete blood count and assessment of renal function.
- Patients with xerostomia are at increased risk of dental caries and should discuss preventive strategies with their dental/oral health professional.
- Treatment of a specific metastatic area must be considered in light of the patient's performance status and other sites of disease; for example, 5%–20% of patients with distant metastases die from progressive cervical disease:
- RAI therapy of iodine-avid bone metastases has been associated with improved survival and should be employed, although RAI is rarely curative.
- Pulmonary micrometastases should be treated with RAI therapy and RAI therapy should be repeated every 6–12 months as long as disease continues to concentrate RAI and respond clinically
Don'ts
- Do not administer radioactive iodine to pregnant women
- Do not administer radioactive iodine to nursing women
References
- ↑ Bomeli SR, LeBeau SO, Ferris RL (2010). "Evaluation of a thyroid nodule". Otolaryngol. Clin. North Am. 43 (2): 229–38, vii. doi:10.1016/j.otc.2010.01.002. PMC 2879398. PMID 20510711.
- ↑ Jena A, Patnayak R, Prakash J, Sachan A, Suresh V, Lakshmi AY (2015). "Malignancy in solitary thyroid nodule: A clinicoradiopathological evaluation". Indian J Endocrinol Metab. 19 (4): 498–503. doi:10.4103/2230-8210.159056. PMC 4481656. PMID 26180765.
- ↑ Chibishev A, Simonovska N, Shikole A (2010). "Post-corrosive injuries of upper gastrointestinal tract". Prilozi. 31 (1): 297–316. PMID 20693948.
- ↑ Bomeli SR, LeBeau SO, Ferris RL (2010). "Evaluation of a thyroid nodule". Otolaryngol. Clin. North Am. 43 (2): 229–38, vii. doi:10.1016/j.otc.2010.01.002. PMC 2879398. PMID 20510711.
- ↑ Jena A, Patnayak R, Prakash J, Sachan A, Suresh V, Lakshmi AY (2015). "Malignancy in solitary thyroid nodule: A clinicoradiopathological evaluation". Indian J Endocrinol Metab. 19 (4): 498–503. doi:10.4103/2230-8210.159056. PMC 4481656. PMID 26180765.
- ↑ Chibishev A, Simonovska N, Shikole A (2010). "Post-corrosive injuries of upper gastrointestinal tract". Prilozi. 31 (1): 297–316. PMID 20693948.