Thyroid carcinoma: Clinical sciences

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Thyroid carcinoma: Clinical sciences

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A 35-year-old woman presents to the clinic with voice hoarseness and dysphagia. She palpated a lump in the anterior neck that was not present before her symptoms began. She has not had odynophagia or weight loss. She has no significant past medical history. Temperature is 37°C (98.7°F), pulse is 70/min, and blood pressure is 118/73 mmHg. Physical examination reveals a palpable, solitary anterior neck mass. No lymphadenopathy is detected. Ultrasound of the neck reveals a solid lesion measuring 2.35 cm in diameter with microcalcifications, irregular margins, and extrathyroidal extension with local invasion and compression of the recurrent laryngeal nerve. Ultrasound-guided fine needle aspiration reveals malignant cells. Histology shows papillae lined with differentiated epithelial cells, which appear pale Orphan-Annie nuclei. Calcific concretions with a circular, laminated appearance are seen in the stroma. CT scan shows no lymph node involvement and no metastasis. Which of the following is the next best step in management?  

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Thyroid carcinoma is a malignant degeneration of either follicular or C-cells of the thyroid. The vast majority of thyroid cancers are differentiated tumors, including papillary, follicular, and oncocytic carcinoma, formerly known as Hurthle cell carcinoma. These differentiated tumors carry a good prognosis. Medullary carcinoma of the C-cells, which produce calcitonin, is more aggressive, while undifferentiated tumors called anaplastic carcinoma have the worst prognosis.

Let’s talk about the first steps to assessing a patient. When assessing a patient with chief concern suggesting thyroid carcinoma, your first step is to obtain a focused history and physical exam. Your patient could be asymptomatic, and in fact might be presenting because a thyroid mass was found incidentally on a physical exam or on imaging done for another reason.

If your patient is symptomatic, symptoms may include hoarseness or difficulty swallowing, especially if there's a mass effect from the tumor compressing the recurrent laryngeal nerve or the esophagus. In some cases, the tumor can even compress on the trachea, leading to stridor.

You should also ask your patient about risk factors that increase the likelihood of thyroid carcinoma. These include biological sex, as it’s more likely to occur in women, but aggressive tumors are more likely to occur in men. Thyroid carcinoma also presents in a bimodal age distribution, often in patients who are younger than 20 or older than 60 years. Finally, papillary thyroid cancer is associated with childhood neck irradiation.

Physical exam typically demonstrates a painless neck mass that might be firm, fixed, and asymmetric in shape. You should also examine the neck for lymph nodes, as they help later with cancer staging.

Alright, your next step is to assess thyroid function with a TSH. If the TSH is below reference range, the patient has hyperthyroidism, and you should consider an alternative diagnosis. If the TSH is normal or above reference range, then your patient is euthyroid or hypothyroid, respectively. You should suspect a malignancy in these cases. Your next step is to obtain a thyroid ultrasound.

Alright, so these ultrasound results will be your first clue. If ultrasound shows a small, cystic lesion that’s smaller than 1 cm, this is not consistent with malignancy, so consider an alternative diagnosis.

On the other hand, if ultrasound demonstrates a solid lesion that’s larger than 1 cm with microcalcifications, hypervascularity, or irregular margins, then you should suspect thyroid carcinoma. Your next step is to obtain either an ultrasound-guided fine needle aspiration or FNA for short, or a core needle biopsy. You will use the biopsy results to determine next steps.

First, if there are no malignant cells, then you should consider an alternative diagnosis. On the other hand, if the initial biopsy shows malignant cells, you’ll want to use the histology results to distinguish between types of malignancies.

Now, let’s take a look at the different types of malignancies.

Now, let’s first consider papillary carcinoma. This one is characterized by papillae lined by epithelial cells with Orphan Annie-Eye nuclei, which look like pale, empty nuclei, or intranuclear pseudoinclusions, which look like bubbles, and are actually invaginations of the cytoplasm into the nucleus . In addition, you may find psammoma bodies, which are abnormal calcium deposits within the stroma.

You’ll then want to stage the cancer using the TNM staging system and a CT scan to determine if the tumor can be resected.

This stands for Tumor size and location, lymph Node in volvement, and presence of distant Metastasis. The treatment for papillary thyroid carcinoma is surgical resection. The surgeon will determine if a lobectomy or total thyroidectomy with lymph node dissection is required. Patients who get total thyroidectomy also require postoperative thyroid hormone replacement. If there’s metastatic disease, the patient may need radioactive iodine, radiation, or targeted systemic therapy.

Alright, let’s go back to the FNA results and discuss follicular carcinoma next. This cancer is characterized by epithelial cells in a follicular pattern. As before, you’ll want a CT to assist with TNM staging. Treatment primarily consists of surgical resection. A lobectomy with an intraoperative frozen section is usually performed first. If there’s evidence of capsular invasion, the rest of the thyroid is removed. These patients would also need postoperative thyroid hormone replacement.

Okay, let’s talk about the findings in oncocytic carcinoma. This malignancy is characterized by pink oncocytic epithelial cells with large amounts of granular acidophilic cytoplasm, arranged in a follicular or solid pattern. Oncocytic carcinoma is managed similarly to follicular carcinoma, first by TNM staging guided by CT, and then treated with surgical resection and postoperative thyroid hormone replacement if needed.

Here’s a high yield fact! Papillary, follicular, and oncocytic carcinoma are considered differentiated thyroid cancers. These are the only thyroid cancers where age is considered as part of the staging system. Patients younger than 55 years are staged based on the presence of metastases. If the patient has no evidence of metastasis, they are stage I; if they have distant metastasis, they are stage II. On the other hand, patients older than 55 years are staged using standard TNM staging. Differentiated thyroid cancers may also be treated with radioactive iodine therapy depending on the risk of disease persistence or recurrence, with those with positive lymph nodes, residual disease, or distant metastases qualifying for the therapy.