虚拟肿瘤板:甲状腺乳头状癌伴淋巴结疾病。

IF 503.1 1区 医学 Q1 ONCOLOGY CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians Pub Date : 2023-06-14 DOI:10.3322/caac.21802
Peter J. Abraham MD, MSPH, Rongzhi Wang MD, Deepti Bahl MD, Pradeep Bhambhvani MD, Sadie Ho, Jessica M. Fazendin MD, Herbert Chen MD, Brenessa M. Lindeman MD, MEHP
{"title":"虚拟肿瘤板:甲状腺乳头状癌伴淋巴结疾病。","authors":"Peter J. Abraham MD, MSPH,&nbsp;Rongzhi Wang MD,&nbsp;Deepti Bahl MD,&nbsp;Pradeep Bhambhvani MD,&nbsp;Sadie Ho,&nbsp;Jessica M. Fazendin MD,&nbsp;Herbert Chen MD,&nbsp;Brenessa M. Lindeman MD, MEHP","doi":"10.3322/caac.21802","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>The patient is a 19-year-old female who had an incidental thyroid nodule discovered on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in July 2020 during the work-up of a superficial, midline neck cellulitis. She reported having noticed a bulge in her neck a few years prior but had never been concerned about it. She began seeing an endocrinologist and underwent a thyroid ultrasound in July 2020, which revealed a solid, hypoechoic nodule in the left upper thyroid lobe measuring 2.2 cm in greatest dimension, classified as American College of Radiology Thyroid Imaging Reporting and Data System (ACR TI-RADS) 4 (Figure 1). Multiple, enlarged, abnormal-appearing lymph nodes were also noted in the left cervical lymph node chain in level IV (Figure 2). The lower pole of the left thyroid lobe was heterogeneous, with scattered calcifications and subcentimeter cystic areas, and no abnormal findings were noted in the isthmus or right lobe of the thyroid gland. Her thyroid function tests were normal, with a thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) level of 2.34 mU/L (reference range, 0.45–5.33 mU/L) and a T4 (thyroxine) level of 0.88 ng/dL (reference range, 0.58–1.64 μg/dL), with negative thyroid peroxidase antibodies and normal blood cell counts.</p><p>A fine-needle aspiration (FNA) of the left thyroid nodule was performed in September 2020 and revealed papillary thyroid cancer (PTC). The patient was then referred to the endocrine surgery clinic for evaluation and further management. An FNA biopsy of the concerning left lateral cervical lymph nodes (Figure 2) was conducted in the endocrine surgery clinic because it had not previously been performed. Given the concerning appearance of the lymph nodes on ultrasound, a total thyroidectomy with possible left central and lateral neck dissections was discussed as the likely operation pending pathology results from the lymph node biopsy. The patient agreed with the treatment plan, and FNA results from the lymph nodes returned as metastatic PTC.</p><p>Given the evidence of metastatic lymph node disease, the patient underwent a total thyroidectomy along with left central and lateral neck dissections in October 2020. Intraoperatively, a very firm nodule in the left lobe of the thyroid gland was encountered that was unable to be cleanly separated from the overlying sternothyroid muscle. Given concern for extrathyroidal extension, the muscle was resected en bloc with the thyroid specimen. During the dissection, there was concern for devascularization of the left superior parathyroid gland, so it was excised and re-implanted. However, there was significant lymphadenopathy low in cervical level VI surrounding the left inferior parathyroid gland, making clear identification of the inferior gland difficult. A frozen section was obtained that confirmed the identification of the left inferior parathyroid gland, so it was also re-implanted into the left sternocleidomastoid muscle. Bulky lymphadenopathy was found throughout the left central and lateral neck (levels II–VI) during the neck dissection.</p><p>Surgical pathology revealed a greatest tumor dimension of 4.5 cm with lymphovascular invasion but no extrathyroidal extension and clear resection margins. Five of the seven resected lymph nodes from the central neck and nine of the 19 nodes in the lateral neck showed PTC without extranodal extension. The overall pathologic stage was pT3aN1b.</p><p>Postoperatively, the patient experienced transient hypocalcemia, which required 8 weeks of calcium supplementation. Her 6-week postoperative thyroglobulin (Tg) level was 0.6 ng/mL in December 2020. A diagnostic whole-body scan in January 2021 revealed physiologic uptake in the thyroidectomy bed with no evidence of metastatic disease. She subsequently underwent radioactive iodine (RAI) therapy with 157.7 millicuries (mCi) of iodine-131 (<sup>131</sup>I), and her postablation scan similarly showed physiologic uptake in the thyroidectomy bed with no evidence of metastatic disease (Figures 3 and 4). Subsequent thyroid ultrasound studies in April and September of 2021 also showed no evidence of recurrent disease or suspicious findings throughout the thyroid bed or bilateral cervical chains I–VI. Her Tg level was undetectable (&lt;0.1 ng/mL) in October 2021 after her RAI therapy.</p><p>At presentation, this is a young female with an incidentally diagnosed thyroid nodule. The initial evaluation for thyroid nodule(s) is comprised of a thorough history and physical examination, including evaluation for symptoms of hypothyroidism or hyperthyroidism. Pertinent history that increases the risk of malignancy includes a history of head or neck radiation, patient extremes of age (younger than 14 or older than 70 years), history of rapid growth of the nodule(s), persistent dysphonia, male gender,<span><sup>1</sup></span> and significant family history of differentiated thyroid cancer, medullary thyroid cancer, or multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2.</p><p>The initial laboratory work-up to evaluate a thyroid nodule includes a TSH level. A suppressed or low TSH level, which signifies a hyperthyroid state, is associated with a decreased probability of malignancy (approximately 3%).<span><sup>2, 3</sup></span> Conversely, an increased level of serum TSH, even when the level is still within reference limits, is statistically associated with an increased risk of cancer in thyroid nodular disease.<span><sup>4</sup></span></p><p>A diagnostic thyroid ultrasound with evaluation of cervical lymph nodes is recommended for all patients with a known or suspected thyroid nodule.<span><sup>5</sup></span> FNA is the procedure of choice for the histologic evaluation of thyroid nodules. The nodule size at initial ultrasound; the ultrasound characteristics, which include the composition (solid vs. cystic), echogenicity, shape, and margins of the nodule; and an increase in size during follow-up determine the need for FNA.<span><sup>6, 7</sup></span> FNA is typically performed under ultrasound guidance to ensure optimal placement of the needle. In the United States, the two commonly used guidelines to estimate risk of malignancy and thus assess a need for FNA are the American Thyroid Association (ATA) guidelines<span><sup>8</sup></span> and the ACR TI-RADS.<span><sup>6, 9</sup></span> Both guidelines recommend biopsy if the thyroid nodule has high-suspicion sonographic features and is over a specific size threshold.<span><sup>10</sup></span> In this patient, an FNA was indicated given her euthyroid state (normal TSH), her enlarged nodule size (&gt;1 cm), concerning features on ultrasound (solid, hypoechoic), as well as the presence of abnormal-appearing lymph nodes in the left cervical lymph node chain level IV.<span><sup>11</sup></span></p><p>Adjuvant therapy for thyroid cancer in the form of RAI is considered when patients have a higher risk of persistent or recurrent disease after surgical intervention.<span><sup>12</sup></span> According to ATA guidelines, patients with gross extrathyroidal extension, incomplete tumor resection, lymph node metastasis &gt;3 cm, the presence of extranodal extension, or distant metastases are deemed high-risk (30%–50% risk of recurrence) and are routinely considered for RAI. In addition, patients with aggressive histology, minor extrathyroidal extension, vascular invasion, or greater than five lymph node metastases in the central or lateral cervical compartments are considered intermediate-risk (10%–30% risk of recurrence) and are generally favored for RAI therapy.<span><sup>8</sup></span> Intrathyroidal differentiated thyroid cancer with five or fewer lymph node micrometastases is generally considered low-risk (&lt;5%–10% risk of recurrence), and RAI therapy is not recommended in these patients. Postoperative serum Tg can help in assessing the persistence of disease or thyroid remnant and predicting potential future disease recurrence. The Tg level reaches its nadir by 3–4 weeks postoperatively in most patients. At our institution, we routinely check the Tg level 4–6 weeks postoperatively as a surveillance marker and to guide further adjuvant therapy. The patient's tumor size, the presence of lymphovascular invasion, and the involvement of greater than five lymph nodes in the neck (&lt;3 cm in size) placed her in the intermediate-risk category, so RAI therapy was recommended to reduce her risk of persistent or recurrent disease.</p><p>Obtaining an adequate assessment of the lymph node-bearing compartments in the central and lateral neck is essential to performing a sufficient thyroid operation. Lymph nodes that appear abnormal on cervical ultrasound need to be biopsied because the presence of lymph node metastases will affect the extent of surgical resection required, as it has been demonstrated that intraoperative frozen-section analysis of the thyroid gland is unreliable and thus should not be routinely performed.<span><sup>13</sup></span> When the patient was first seen in the endocrine surgery clinic, biopsy of the concerning lymph nodes had not yet been completed, thus an FNA was performed during the initial endocrine surgery visit. To expedite care while awaiting the FNA pathology results, all operative possibilities were discussed with the patient during the initial visit, including lobectomy and total thyroidectomy with possible central and lateral neck dissections. Consent for the operation was obtained in the clinic, and the extent of the operation was confirmed by telephone after release of the FNA pathology result 1 week later. This expedited process allowed the patient to undergo her definitive operation, which was performed within 2 weeks of her initial surgical evaluation.</p><p>Although the presence of lymph node metastases was the primary driver for the decision to perform a total thyroidectomy, there were additional benefits, including the ability to perform postoperative RAI therapy and allowing for postoperative surveillance using the Tg level. These secondary benefits of removing the entire thyroid gland aided the multidisciplinary approach to the patient's care and allowed our nuclear medicine and endocrinology colleagues to provide additional therapy and closer monitoring.</p><p>At our institution, we often perform outpatient neck dissections and do not routinely leave a cervical drain.<span><sup>14</sup></span> Our outpatient thyroidectomy patients have a parathyroid hormone (PTH) level drawn once they arrive at the postoperative anesthesia care unit (PACU) and are monitored postoperatively in the PACU for 2–4 hours before discharge. We have a protocol that specifies the doses of calcium and calcitriol with which to send patients home based on the PACU PTH level, which considers high-risk features, such as the presence of hyperthyroidism. Patients then follow-up in the clinic in 1–2 weeks with calcium and PTH levels drawn at that time. All total thyroidectomy patients are started on levothyroxine postoperatively with TSH and Tg levels drawn at 6 weeks postoperatively.</p><p>Multiple studies have demonstrated the safety of performing outpatient total thyroidectomy,<span><sup>14-17</sup></span> and it has become an increasingly common practice among endocrine surgeons. Additional studies have demonstrated no difference in the complication rate when central and/or lateral neck dissections are concurrently performed with the total thyroidectomy, and increasing numbers of endocrine surgeons safely perform these operations on an outpatient basis.<span><sup>18-20</sup></span> Similarly, studies have indicated that the placement of a drain does not reduce the risk of hematoma formation or other complications, including chyle leak, in post-thyroidectomy patients,<span><sup>21, 22</sup></span> even after lateral neck dissection.<span><sup>23-26</sup></span> Given our patient's lack of other comorbidities, any predisposing risk factor for a hematoma, or gross evidence of chyle leak intraoperatively, an outpatient operation without drain placement was chosen and successfully performed without complication.</p><p>The decision between a selective and modified radical neck dissection was another important one to consider in this patient. Some evidence suggests that a compartment-oriented lymphadenectomy is all that is needed for macroscopic nodal disease and that no benefit is gained by adding a complete level V dissection unless there is evidence of metastasis in level V or extensive (three-compartment) disease.<span><sup>27, 28</sup></span> Our patient's nodal disease appeared to be limited to cervical levels III and IV, so she underwent a selective neck dissection of the lateral neck involving compartments II–IV with a partial level V dissection. This compartment-oriented dissection was performed to balance the removal of all macroscopic nodal disease with the attempt to minimize morbidity associated with radical neck dissections.</p><p>Radioiodine (<sup>131</sup>I) therapy has been used in the management of patients with well differentiated PTC or follicular thyroid cancer since the 1940s for remnant ablation and as adjuvant treatment for subclinical, residual tumor or for macroscopic, metastatic disease. Treatment benefits include enabling disease monitoring with serum Tg and radioiodine scans; and, in intermediate-risk and high-risk patients, there are added benefits of a decreased risk of recurrence and improved disease-specific, progression-free, and overall survival. The thyroid follicular cell has a unique ability to take up iodine from the blood through its membrane sodium-iodide transporter. After uptake by this active transport process, <sup>131</sup>I causes acute thyroid cell death by the emission of short path-length (1–2 mm) beta particles. The identification and localization of uptake foci may be enhanced by a concomitant single-photon emission computed tomography/computed tomography (SPECT/CT) scan.<span><sup>8</sup></span> Diagnostic whole-body scans (WBS) are acquired 1–3 days after RAI administration, whereas post-RAI treatment images can be obtained 2–7 days after treatment.<span><sup>29</sup></span></p><p>The routine use of a preablation or diagnostic WBS with SPECT/CT is controversial, and there continues to be discussion on the utility of postoperative RAI diagnostic scanning (with or without SPECT/CT) in guiding RAI therapeutic decision making. According to the ATA, WBS may be useful when the extent of the thyroid remnant or residual disease cannot be accurately ascertained from the surgical report or neck ultrasonography and when the results may alter the decision to treat or the activity of RAI that is to be administered. For example, scan findings could suggest the need for additional surgery for resectable residual tumor or possibly could increase the administered activity if there is identification of otherwise unknown metastatic disease. Cons of WBS include the potential for stunning the thyroid follicular cells by the low dose of radioiodine used, which may lower uptake of the subsequent therapeutic radioiodine.<span><sup>30</sup></span> In addition, it is well documented that a diagnostic, low-dose RAI scan is frequently falsely negative, but the post-<sup>131</sup>I therapy scan is positive for functioning <sup>131</sup>I-avid metastases.<span><sup>12</sup></span></p><p>Based on age-based TNM staging, the patient had stage I disease, but the ATA risk-stratification system put our patient at intermediate risk of persistent/recurrent disease because she had greater than five enlarged lateral neck nodes measuring ≤3 cm in greatest dimension.<span><sup>8, 31</sup></span> For the treatment of thyroid cancer involving cervical lymph nodes, <sup>131</sup>I activity in the range from 5.55 to 7.4 gigabecquerels (150–200 mCi) is typically administered to adults.<span><sup>30</sup></span> According to ATA recommendations for adjuvant RAI therapy for suspected microscopic residual disease, it is uncertain whether routine use of higher administered activities (&gt;150 mCi) will reduce structural disease recurrence for T3 and N1 disease.<span><sup>8</sup></span> Therefore, <sup>131</sup>I activity of approximately 150 mCi was selected for our patient. Figure 3 shows the posttherapy WBS with physiologic uptake in the thyroid bed and absence of radioiodine-avid nodal or distant metastatic disease. The small focus to the right of thyroid bed activity on the WBS (Figure 3, arrow) is artifactual from patient motion because the same is not seen on the static head and neck images (Figure 4).</p><p>As discussed above, nuclear medicine physicians are divided about the need for postoperative diagnostic low-activity radioiodine (1–3 mCi; <sup>131</sup>I or <sup>123</sup>I) WBS.<span><sup>29</sup></span> If there were no remnants or other foci of iodine-avid tissue on the scan, then giving radioiodine would not be indicated; however, in high-risk patients, RAI treatment of occult metastases may be warranted.<span><sup>29</sup></span> In our patient, the diagnostic scan was performed given the risk factors of muscle invasion and multiple nodal metastases. If additional resectable disease had been identified on the preablation scan, then referral to surgery would have been a reasonable consideration. Alternatively, if she had distant tumor spread (e.g. lung or bone) identified, then the administered radioiodine activity would have been increased. In her case, neither both the pretherapy and posttherapy scans did not identify additional resectable tumor or metastatic disease, and thus the treatment plan or <sup>131</sup>I activity (150 mCi) was not altered.</p><p>PTC with nodal metastases is a complex disease that requires a multidisciplinary team approach. Adequate treatment of the disease requires the careful integration of multiple medical services, including endocrinology, endocrine surgery, and nuclear medicine. Clear communication between the various teams and the patient is essential to keeping the patient well informed and maintaining patient autonomy. Ultimately, a multidisciplinary approach can provide excellent care for patients with thyroid cancer and especially should be pursued in instances of lymph node metastases.</p><p>The authors declared no conflicts of interest.</p>","PeriodicalId":137,"journal":{"name":"CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians","volume":"73 6","pages":"555-561"},"PeriodicalIF":503.1000,"publicationDate":"2023-06-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Virtual Tumor Board: Papillary thyroid carcinoma with nodal disease\",\"authors\":\"Peter J. Abraham MD, MSPH,&nbsp;Rongzhi Wang MD,&nbsp;Deepti Bahl MD,&nbsp;Pradeep Bhambhvani MD,&nbsp;Sadie Ho,&nbsp;Jessica M. Fazendin MD,&nbsp;Herbert Chen MD,&nbsp;Brenessa M. Lindeman MD, MEHP\",\"doi\":\"10.3322/caac.21802\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>The patient is a 19-year-old female who had an incidental thyroid nodule discovered on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in July 2020 during the work-up of a superficial, midline neck cellulitis. She reported having noticed a bulge in her neck a few years prior but had never been concerned about it. She began seeing an endocrinologist and underwent a thyroid ultrasound in July 2020, which revealed a solid, hypoechoic nodule in the left upper thyroid lobe measuring 2.2 cm in greatest dimension, classified as American College of Radiology Thyroid Imaging Reporting and Data System (ACR TI-RADS) 4 (Figure 1). Multiple, enlarged, abnormal-appearing lymph nodes were also noted in the left cervical lymph node chain in level IV (Figure 2). The lower pole of the left thyroid lobe was heterogeneous, with scattered calcifications and subcentimeter cystic areas, and no abnormal findings were noted in the isthmus or right lobe of the thyroid gland. Her thyroid function tests were normal, with a thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) level of 2.34 mU/L (reference range, 0.45–5.33 mU/L) and a T4 (thyroxine) level of 0.88 ng/dL (reference range, 0.58–1.64 μg/dL), with negative thyroid peroxidase antibodies and normal blood cell counts.</p><p>A fine-needle aspiration (FNA) of the left thyroid nodule was performed in September 2020 and revealed papillary thyroid cancer (PTC). The patient was then referred to the endocrine surgery clinic for evaluation and further management. An FNA biopsy of the concerning left lateral cervical lymph nodes (Figure 2) was conducted in the endocrine surgery clinic because it had not previously been performed. Given the concerning appearance of the lymph nodes on ultrasound, a total thyroidectomy with possible left central and lateral neck dissections was discussed as the likely operation pending pathology results from the lymph node biopsy. The patient agreed with the treatment plan, and FNA results from the lymph nodes returned as metastatic PTC.</p><p>Given the evidence of metastatic lymph node disease, the patient underwent a total thyroidectomy along with left central and lateral neck dissections in October 2020. Intraoperatively, a very firm nodule in the left lobe of the thyroid gland was encountered that was unable to be cleanly separated from the overlying sternothyroid muscle. Given concern for extrathyroidal extension, the muscle was resected en bloc with the thyroid specimen. During the dissection, there was concern for devascularization of the left superior parathyroid gland, so it was excised and re-implanted. However, there was significant lymphadenopathy low in cervical level VI surrounding the left inferior parathyroid gland, making clear identification of the inferior gland difficult. A frozen section was obtained that confirmed the identification of the left inferior parathyroid gland, so it was also re-implanted into the left sternocleidomastoid muscle. Bulky lymphadenopathy was found throughout the left central and lateral neck (levels II–VI) during the neck dissection.</p><p>Surgical pathology revealed a greatest tumor dimension of 4.5 cm with lymphovascular invasion but no extrathyroidal extension and clear resection margins. Five of the seven resected lymph nodes from the central neck and nine of the 19 nodes in the lateral neck showed PTC without extranodal extension. The overall pathologic stage was pT3aN1b.</p><p>Postoperatively, the patient experienced transient hypocalcemia, which required 8 weeks of calcium supplementation. Her 6-week postoperative thyroglobulin (Tg) level was 0.6 ng/mL in December 2020. A diagnostic whole-body scan in January 2021 revealed physiologic uptake in the thyroidectomy bed with no evidence of metastatic disease. She subsequently underwent radioactive iodine (RAI) therapy with 157.7 millicuries (mCi) of iodine-131 (<sup>131</sup>I), and her postablation scan similarly showed physiologic uptake in the thyroidectomy bed with no evidence of metastatic disease (Figures 3 and 4). Subsequent thyroid ultrasound studies in April and September of 2021 also showed no evidence of recurrent disease or suspicious findings throughout the thyroid bed or bilateral cervical chains I–VI. Her Tg level was undetectable (&lt;0.1 ng/mL) in October 2021 after her RAI therapy.</p><p>At presentation, this is a young female with an incidentally diagnosed thyroid nodule. The initial evaluation for thyroid nodule(s) is comprised of a thorough history and physical examination, including evaluation for symptoms of hypothyroidism or hyperthyroidism. Pertinent history that increases the risk of malignancy includes a history of head or neck radiation, patient extremes of age (younger than 14 or older than 70 years), history of rapid growth of the nodule(s), persistent dysphonia, male gender,<span><sup>1</sup></span> and significant family history of differentiated thyroid cancer, medullary thyroid cancer, or multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2.</p><p>The initial laboratory work-up to evaluate a thyroid nodule includes a TSH level. A suppressed or low TSH level, which signifies a hyperthyroid state, is associated with a decreased probability of malignancy (approximately 3%).<span><sup>2, 3</sup></span> Conversely, an increased level of serum TSH, even when the level is still within reference limits, is statistically associated with an increased risk of cancer in thyroid nodular disease.<span><sup>4</sup></span></p><p>A diagnostic thyroid ultrasound with evaluation of cervical lymph nodes is recommended for all patients with a known or suspected thyroid nodule.<span><sup>5</sup></span> FNA is the procedure of choice for the histologic evaluation of thyroid nodules. The nodule size at initial ultrasound; the ultrasound characteristics, which include the composition (solid vs. cystic), echogenicity, shape, and margins of the nodule; and an increase in size during follow-up determine the need for FNA.<span><sup>6, 7</sup></span> FNA is typically performed under ultrasound guidance to ensure optimal placement of the needle. In the United States, the two commonly used guidelines to estimate risk of malignancy and thus assess a need for FNA are the American Thyroid Association (ATA) guidelines<span><sup>8</sup></span> and the ACR TI-RADS.<span><sup>6, 9</sup></span> Both guidelines recommend biopsy if the thyroid nodule has high-suspicion sonographic features and is over a specific size threshold.<span><sup>10</sup></span> In this patient, an FNA was indicated given her euthyroid state (normal TSH), her enlarged nodule size (&gt;1 cm), concerning features on ultrasound (solid, hypoechoic), as well as the presence of abnormal-appearing lymph nodes in the left cervical lymph node chain level IV.<span><sup>11</sup></span></p><p>Adjuvant therapy for thyroid cancer in the form of RAI is considered when patients have a higher risk of persistent or recurrent disease after surgical intervention.<span><sup>12</sup></span> According to ATA guidelines, patients with gross extrathyroidal extension, incomplete tumor resection, lymph node metastasis &gt;3 cm, the presence of extranodal extension, or distant metastases are deemed high-risk (30%–50% risk of recurrence) and are routinely considered for RAI. In addition, patients with aggressive histology, minor extrathyroidal extension, vascular invasion, or greater than five lymph node metastases in the central or lateral cervical compartments are considered intermediate-risk (10%–30% risk of recurrence) and are generally favored for RAI therapy.<span><sup>8</sup></span> Intrathyroidal differentiated thyroid cancer with five or fewer lymph node micrometastases is generally considered low-risk (&lt;5%–10% risk of recurrence), and RAI therapy is not recommended in these patients. Postoperative serum Tg can help in assessing the persistence of disease or thyroid remnant and predicting potential future disease recurrence. The Tg level reaches its nadir by 3–4 weeks postoperatively in most patients. At our institution, we routinely check the Tg level 4–6 weeks postoperatively as a surveillance marker and to guide further adjuvant therapy. The patient's tumor size, the presence of lymphovascular invasion, and the involvement of greater than five lymph nodes in the neck (&lt;3 cm in size) placed her in the intermediate-risk category, so RAI therapy was recommended to reduce her risk of persistent or recurrent disease.</p><p>Obtaining an adequate assessment of the lymph node-bearing compartments in the central and lateral neck is essential to performing a sufficient thyroid operation. Lymph nodes that appear abnormal on cervical ultrasound need to be biopsied because the presence of lymph node metastases will affect the extent of surgical resection required, as it has been demonstrated that intraoperative frozen-section analysis of the thyroid gland is unreliable and thus should not be routinely performed.<span><sup>13</sup></span> When the patient was first seen in the endocrine surgery clinic, biopsy of the concerning lymph nodes had not yet been completed, thus an FNA was performed during the initial endocrine surgery visit. To expedite care while awaiting the FNA pathology results, all operative possibilities were discussed with the patient during the initial visit, including lobectomy and total thyroidectomy with possible central and lateral neck dissections. Consent for the operation was obtained in the clinic, and the extent of the operation was confirmed by telephone after release of the FNA pathology result 1 week later. This expedited process allowed the patient to undergo her definitive operation, which was performed within 2 weeks of her initial surgical evaluation.</p><p>Although the presence of lymph node metastases was the primary driver for the decision to perform a total thyroidectomy, there were additional benefits, including the ability to perform postoperative RAI therapy and allowing for postoperative surveillance using the Tg level. These secondary benefits of removing the entire thyroid gland aided the multidisciplinary approach to the patient's care and allowed our nuclear medicine and endocrinology colleagues to provide additional therapy and closer monitoring.</p><p>At our institution, we often perform outpatient neck dissections and do not routinely leave a cervical drain.<span><sup>14</sup></span> Our outpatient thyroidectomy patients have a parathyroid hormone (PTH) level drawn once they arrive at the postoperative anesthesia care unit (PACU) and are monitored postoperatively in the PACU for 2–4 hours before discharge. We have a protocol that specifies the doses of calcium and calcitriol with which to send patients home based on the PACU PTH level, which considers high-risk features, such as the presence of hyperthyroidism. Patients then follow-up in the clinic in 1–2 weeks with calcium and PTH levels drawn at that time. All total thyroidectomy patients are started on levothyroxine postoperatively with TSH and Tg levels drawn at 6 weeks postoperatively.</p><p>Multiple studies have demonstrated the safety of performing outpatient total thyroidectomy,<span><sup>14-17</sup></span> and it has become an increasingly common practice among endocrine surgeons. Additional studies have demonstrated no difference in the complication rate when central and/or lateral neck dissections are concurrently performed with the total thyroidectomy, and increasing numbers of endocrine surgeons safely perform these operations on an outpatient basis.<span><sup>18-20</sup></span> Similarly, studies have indicated that the placement of a drain does not reduce the risk of hematoma formation or other complications, including chyle leak, in post-thyroidectomy patients,<span><sup>21, 22</sup></span> even after lateral neck dissection.<span><sup>23-26</sup></span> Given our patient's lack of other comorbidities, any predisposing risk factor for a hematoma, or gross evidence of chyle leak intraoperatively, an outpatient operation without drain placement was chosen and successfully performed without complication.</p><p>The decision between a selective and modified radical neck dissection was another important one to consider in this patient. Some evidence suggests that a compartment-oriented lymphadenectomy is all that is needed for macroscopic nodal disease and that no benefit is gained by adding a complete level V dissection unless there is evidence of metastasis in level V or extensive (three-compartment) disease.<span><sup>27, 28</sup></span> Our patient's nodal disease appeared to be limited to cervical levels III and IV, so she underwent a selective neck dissection of the lateral neck involving compartments II–IV with a partial level V dissection. This compartment-oriented dissection was performed to balance the removal of all macroscopic nodal disease with the attempt to minimize morbidity associated with radical neck dissections.</p><p>Radioiodine (<sup>131</sup>I) therapy has been used in the management of patients with well differentiated PTC or follicular thyroid cancer since the 1940s for remnant ablation and as adjuvant treatment for subclinical, residual tumor or for macroscopic, metastatic disease. Treatment benefits include enabling disease monitoring with serum Tg and radioiodine scans; and, in intermediate-risk and high-risk patients, there are added benefits of a decreased risk of recurrence and improved disease-specific, progression-free, and overall survival. The thyroid follicular cell has a unique ability to take up iodine from the blood through its membrane sodium-iodide transporter. After uptake by this active transport process, <sup>131</sup>I causes acute thyroid cell death by the emission of short path-length (1–2 mm) beta particles. The identification and localization of uptake foci may be enhanced by a concomitant single-photon emission computed tomography/computed tomography (SPECT/CT) scan.<span><sup>8</sup></span> Diagnostic whole-body scans (WBS) are acquired 1–3 days after RAI administration, whereas post-RAI treatment images can be obtained 2–7 days after treatment.<span><sup>29</sup></span></p><p>The routine use of a preablation or diagnostic WBS with SPECT/CT is controversial, and there continues to be discussion on the utility of postoperative RAI diagnostic scanning (with or without SPECT/CT) in guiding RAI therapeutic decision making. According to the ATA, WBS may be useful when the extent of the thyroid remnant or residual disease cannot be accurately ascertained from the surgical report or neck ultrasonography and when the results may alter the decision to treat or the activity of RAI that is to be administered. For example, scan findings could suggest the need for additional surgery for resectable residual tumor or possibly could increase the administered activity if there is identification of otherwise unknown metastatic disease. Cons of WBS include the potential for stunning the thyroid follicular cells by the low dose of radioiodine used, which may lower uptake of the subsequent therapeutic radioiodine.<span><sup>30</sup></span> In addition, it is well documented that a diagnostic, low-dose RAI scan is frequently falsely negative, but the post-<sup>131</sup>I therapy scan is positive for functioning <sup>131</sup>I-avid metastases.<span><sup>12</sup></span></p><p>Based on age-based TNM staging, the patient had stage I disease, but the ATA risk-stratification system put our patient at intermediate risk of persistent/recurrent disease because she had greater than five enlarged lateral neck nodes measuring ≤3 cm in greatest dimension.<span><sup>8, 31</sup></span> For the treatment of thyroid cancer involving cervical lymph nodes, <sup>131</sup>I activity in the range from 5.55 to 7.4 gigabecquerels (150–200 mCi) is typically administered to adults.<span><sup>30</sup></span> According to ATA recommendations for adjuvant RAI therapy for suspected microscopic residual disease, it is uncertain whether routine use of higher administered activities (&gt;150 mCi) will reduce structural disease recurrence for T3 and N1 disease.<span><sup>8</sup></span> Therefore, <sup>131</sup>I activity of approximately 150 mCi was selected for our patient. Figure 3 shows the posttherapy WBS with physiologic uptake in the thyroid bed and absence of radioiodine-avid nodal or distant metastatic disease. The small focus to the right of thyroid bed activity on the WBS (Figure 3, arrow) is artifactual from patient motion because the same is not seen on the static head and neck images (Figure 4).</p><p>As discussed above, nuclear medicine physicians are divided about the need for postoperative diagnostic low-activity radioiodine (1–3 mCi; <sup>131</sup>I or <sup>123</sup>I) WBS.<span><sup>29</sup></span> If there were no remnants or other foci of iodine-avid tissue on the scan, then giving radioiodine would not be indicated; however, in high-risk patients, RAI treatment of occult metastases may be warranted.<span><sup>29</sup></span> In our patient, the diagnostic scan was performed given the risk factors of muscle invasion and multiple nodal metastases. If additional resectable disease had been identified on the preablation scan, then referral to surgery would have been a reasonable consideration. Alternatively, if she had distant tumor spread (e.g. lung or bone) identified, then the administered radioiodine activity would have been increased. In her case, neither both the pretherapy and posttherapy scans did not identify additional resectable tumor or metastatic disease, and thus the treatment plan or <sup>131</sup>I activity (150 mCi) was not altered.</p><p>PTC with nodal metastases is a complex disease that requires a multidisciplinary team approach. Adequate treatment of the disease requires the careful integration of multiple medical services, including endocrinology, endocrine surgery, and nuclear medicine. Clear communication between the various teams and the patient is essential to keeping the patient well informed and maintaining patient autonomy. Ultimately, a multidisciplinary approach can provide excellent care for patients with thyroid cancer and especially should be pursued in instances of lymph node metastases.</p><p>The authors declared no conflicts of interest.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":137,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians\",\"volume\":\"73 6\",\"pages\":\"555-561\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":503.1000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-06-14\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"3\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.3322/caac.21802\",\"RegionNum\":1,\"RegionCategory\":\"医学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q1\",\"JCRName\":\"ONCOLOGY\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.3322/caac.21802","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"ONCOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

摘要

该患者是一名19岁的女性,在2020年7月对浅表性颈部中线蜂窝织炎进行检查时,在磁共振成像(MRI)上发现了偶发甲状腺结节。她报告说,几年前她就注意到脖子上有一个肿块,但从来没有担心过。她开始看到一个内分泌学家,在2020年7月,接受了甲状腺超声显示出一个坚实的、呈结节在左侧上部甲状腺叶测量在最大尺寸2.2厘米,被列为美国放射学院甲状腺显像报告和数据系统(ACR TI-RADS) 4(图1)。多个扩大,abnormal-appearing淋巴结也指出在左侧颈部淋巴结链在第四级别(图2)。左侧甲状腺叶的低杆是异类,散在性钙化及亚厘米囊性区,峡部及甲状腺右叶未见异常。甲状腺功能检查正常,促甲状腺激素(TSH)水平2.34 mU/L(参考范围0.45 ~ 5.33 mU/L), T4(甲状腺素)水平0.88 ng/dL(参考范围0.58 ~ 1.64 μg/dL),甲状腺过氧化物酶抗体阴性,血细胞计数正常。2020年9月行左侧甲状腺结节细针穿刺(FNA),发现甲状腺乳头状癌(PTC)。患者随后被转到内分泌外科诊所进行评估和进一步的治疗。在内分泌外科诊所进行了有关左侧颈部外侧淋巴结的FNA活检(图2),因为以前没有做过。考虑到淋巴结在超声上的相关表现,我们讨论了甲状腺全切除术和可能的左中央和外侧颈部清扫,因为淋巴结活检的病理结果可能是手术。患者同意治疗方案,淋巴结的FNA结果作为转移性PTC返回。鉴于转移性淋巴结疾病的证据,该患者于2020年10月接受了甲状腺全切除术以及左中央和外侧颈部切除术。术中,在甲状腺左叶发现了一个非常坚固的结节,无法与上盖的胸甲肌清晰地分离。考虑到甲状腺外展,肌肉与甲状腺标本一并切除。在解剖过程中,担心左侧甲状旁腺断流,切除后重新植入。然而,在左侧下甲状旁腺周围的颈部VI层有明显的淋巴结病变,难以明确识别下腺。冷冻切片确认为左侧下甲状旁腺,因此也将其重新植入左侧胸锁乳突肌。在颈部清扫时,发现大面积淋巴结病变遍及左中央和外侧颈部(II-VI节段)。手术病理显示肿瘤最大尺寸为4.5 cm,伴淋巴血管浸润,无甲状腺外展,切除边缘清晰。7个切除的中央颈部淋巴结中有5个,19个切除的外侧颈部淋巴结中有9个显示PTC,无结外延伸。总体病理分期为pT3aN1b。术后患者出现短暂性低钙血症,需要补钙8周。2020年12月,术后6周甲状腺球蛋白(Tg)水平为0.6 ng/mL。2021年1月的诊断性全身扫描显示甲状腺切除术床的生理性摄取,无转移性疾病的证据。随后,她接受了157.7毫微(mCi)碘-131 (131I)的放射性碘(RAI)治疗,消融后扫描同样显示甲状腺切除术床的生生性摄取,无转移性疾病的证据(图3和4)。2021年4月和9月的甲状腺超声检查也未显示甲状腺床或双侧宫颈链I-VI的复发性疾病或可疑发现的证据。2021年10月接受RAI治疗后,Tg水平未检出(&lt;0.1 ng/mL)。在就诊时,这是一个偶然诊断为甲状腺结节的年轻女性。甲状腺结节的初步评估包括全面的病史和体格检查,包括甲状腺功能减退或甲状腺功能亢进症状的评估。增加恶性肿瘤风险的相关病史包括头颈部放疗史、患者极端年龄(小于14岁或大于70岁)、结节快速生长史、持续性发音障碍、男性、1和分化型甲状腺癌、甲状腺髓样癌或多发性内分泌肿瘤2型的显著家族史。评估甲状腺结节的初步实验室检查包括TSH水平。 抑制或低TSH水平,表明甲状腺功能亢进状态,与恶性肿瘤的可能性降低有关(约3%)。2,3相反,血清TSH水平升高,即使仍在参考范围内,在统计上与甲状腺结节性疾病中癌症风险增加相关。4 .对于所有已知或怀疑有甲状腺结节的患者,推荐4A甲状腺超声诊断并评估颈部淋巴结FNA是甲状腺结节组织学评估的首选程序。超声初始结节大小;超声特征,包括结节的组成(实性与囊性)、回声强度、形状和边缘;和随访期间尺寸的增加决定了FNA的必要性6,7 FNA通常在超声引导下进行,以确保针的最佳放置。在美国,用于评估恶性肿瘤风险从而评估是否需要FNA的两个常用指南是美国甲状腺协会(ATA)指南和ACR TI-RADS。如果甲状腺结节有高可疑的超声特征并且超过了特定的大小阈值,两份指南都建议进行活检考虑到该患者甲状腺功能正常(TSH正常),结节增大(约1cm),超声表现(实性、低回声),以及左侧颈淋巴链ⅳ级存在异常淋巴结,建议行FNA检查。11当患者手术干预后疾病持续或复发的风险较高时,可考虑以RAI形式辅助治疗甲状腺癌根据ATA指南,甲状腺外肿大、肿瘤切除不全、淋巴结转移超过3cm、结外肿大或远处转移的患者被认为是高危患者(复发风险为30%-50%),常规考虑RAI。此外,具有侵袭性组织学、轻微甲状腺外扩张、血管侵犯或大于5个淋巴结转移的患者被认为是中度危险(复发风险为10%-30%),通常倾向于RAI治疗伴有5个或更少淋巴结微转移的甲状腺内分化型甲状腺癌通常被认为是低风险的(5%-10%的复发风险),不建议对这些患者进行RAI治疗。术后血清Tg有助于评估疾病的持续性或甲状腺残余,并预测未来可能的疾病复发。多数患者术后3-4周Tg水平降至最低点。在我们的机构,我们定期检查术后4-6周的Tg水平作为监测指标,并指导进一步的辅助治疗。患者肿瘤大小、存在淋巴血管浸润、颈部淋巴结累及大于5个(大小为3cm)属于中危类型,因此推荐RAI治疗以降低其持续或复发的风险。充分评估颈部中央和外侧的淋巴结室是进行充分甲状腺手术的必要条件。在宫颈超声检查中出现异常的淋巴结需要进行活检,因为淋巴结转移的存在会影响手术切除的程度,因为已经证明术中甲状腺的冷冻切片分析是不可靠的,因此不应该常规进行患者首次在内分泌外科门诊就诊时,相关淋巴结活检尚未完成,因此在首次内分泌外科就诊时进行了FNA。为了在等待FNA病理结果的同时加快护理,在初次就诊时与患者讨论了所有手术可能性,包括肺叶切除术和甲状腺全切除术,可能的中央和外侧颈部切除术。临床获得手术同意,1周后公布FNA病理结果电话确认手术程度。这一快速的过程使患者能够在初始手术评估后2周内进行最终手术。虽然淋巴结转移的存在是决定进行全甲状腺切除术的主要驱动因素,但还有其他好处,包括能够进行术后RAI治疗和允许术后使用Tg水平进行监测。切除整个甲状腺的这些次要好处有助于多学科方法对患者的护理,并允许我们的核医学和内分泌学同事提供额外的治疗和更密切的监测。在我们的机构,我们经常进行门诊颈部解剖,并没有常规留下颈椎引流。 14我们的门诊甲状腺切除术患者一旦到达术后麻醉护理病房(PACU),就会测量甲状旁腺激素(PTH)水平,并在PACU进行术后出院前2-4小时的监测。我们有一个方案,根据PACU PTH水平指定钙和骨化三醇的剂量,将患者送回家,PACU PTH考虑到高风险特征,如甲状腺功能亢进的存在。患者随访1-2周,随访时取钙和甲状旁腺激素水平。所有全甲状腺切除术患者术后开始使用左旋甲状腺素,术后6周测定TSH和Tg水平。多项研究已经证明了门诊甲状腺全切除术的安全性,14-17并且它已成为内分泌外科医生越来越普遍的做法。另外的研究表明,当中央和/或外侧颈部清扫与甲状腺全切除术同时进行时,并发症发生率没有差异,越来越多的内分泌外科医生在门诊安全地进行这些手术。18-20同样,研究表明,在甲状腺切除术后的患者中,放置引流管并不能降低血肿形成或其他并发症(包括乳糜漏)的风险21,22,即使在侧颈清扫后也是如此。23-26考虑到我们的患者没有其他合并症、血肿的易感危险因素或术中乳糜漏的明显证据,我们选择了不放置引流管的门诊手术,并成功地完成了手术,没有并发症。在选择性和改良根治性颈部清扫之间的决定是该患者需要考虑的另一个重要问题。一些证据表明,对于肉眼可见的淋巴结疾病,只需要进行面向室的淋巴结切除术就可以了,除非有证据表明在V级或广泛(三室)疾病中存在转移,否则再进行完全的V级淋巴结清扫没有任何益处。27,28我们的患者的淋巴结疾病似乎仅限于颈椎III和IV节段,因此她接受了选择性的颈侧廓清术,包括II-IV节段和部分V节段廓清术。这种以腔室为导向的解剖是为了平衡所有宏观淋巴结疾病的切除,并尽量减少根治性颈部清扫相关的发病率。自20世纪40年代以来,放射性碘(131I)治疗已被用于治疗分化良好的PTC或滤泡性甲状腺癌患者的残余消融,并作为亚临床残余肿瘤或宏观转移性疾病的辅助治疗。治疗益处包括能够通过血清Tg和放射性碘扫描进行疾病监测;而且,在中危和高危患者中,有降低复发风险和改善疾病特异性、无进展和总生存期的额外益处。甲状腺滤泡细胞具有独特的能力,通过其膜碘化钠转运体从血液中吸收碘。131I被主动运输过程吸收后,通过释放短路径长度(1 - 2mm) β颗粒导致急性甲状腺细胞死亡。同时进行单光子发射计算机断层扫描/计算机断层扫描(SPECT/CT)可增强摄取病灶的识别和定位诊断性全身扫描(WBS)是在RAI治疗后1-3天获得的,而RAI治疗后的图像可以在治疗后2-7天获得。常规使用SPECT/CT进行预消融或诊断性WBS是有争议的,并且关于术后RAI诊断扫描(带或不带SPECT/CT)在指导RAI治疗决策中的应用的讨论仍在继续。根据ATA,当手术报告或颈部超声检查不能准确确定甲状腺残余或残留疾病的范围时,当结果可能改变治疗决定或将要实施的RAI活动时,WBS可能是有用的。例如,扫描结果可能表明需要对可切除的残余肿瘤进行额外的手术,或者如果发现其他未知的转移性疾病,可能会增加给药的活性。WBS的缺点包括使用的低剂量放射性碘有可能使甲状腺滤泡细胞昏迷,这可能降低随后治疗性放射性碘的吸收此外,有充分的证据表明,诊断性的低剂量RAI扫描经常是假阴性的,但131i治疗后的扫描对于功能性的131I-avid转移瘤是阳性的。根据基于年龄的TNM分期,患者为I期疾病,但ATA风险分层系统将患者置于持续/复发疾病的中等风险,因为她有大于5个最大尺寸≤3cm的扩大的侧颈淋巴结。 8,31对于涉及颈部淋巴结的甲状腺癌的治疗,通常对成人使用5.55至7.4吉贝克勒尔(150 - 200mci)范围内的131I根据ATA对疑似显微残留疾病辅助RAI治疗的建议,尚不确定常规使用较高给药活度(150 mCi)是否会减少T3和N1疾病的结构性疾病复发因此,为我们的患者选择了大约150 mCi的131I活性。图3显示了治疗后甲状腺床生理性摄取的WBS,没有放射性碘结节或远处转移性疾病。WBS上甲状腺床活动右侧的小焦点(图3,箭头)是由于患者运动造成的假影,因为在静态头部和颈部图像上没有看到相同的焦点(图4)。如上所述,核医学医生对是否需要术后诊断低活性放射性碘(1-3 mCi;如果扫描上没有残留或其他嗜碘组织灶,则不建议给予放射性碘;然而,在高危患者中,RAI治疗隐匿性转移可能是必要的在我们的患者中,考虑到肌肉侵袭和多淋巴结转移的危险因素,进行了诊断性扫描。如果在消融前扫描中发现了其他可切除的疾病,那么转诊手术将是一个合理的考虑。或者,如果发现远处肿瘤扩散(如肺或骨),则给予的放射性碘活度将会增加。在她的病例中,治疗前和治疗后的扫描都没有发现额外的可切除肿瘤或转移性疾病,因此治疗计划或131I活性(150 mCi)没有改变。伴有淋巴结转移的PTC是一种复杂的疾病,需要多学科的团队合作。该疾病的充分治疗需要多种医疗服务的精心整合,包括内分泌学、内分泌外科和核医学。各个团队和患者之间的清晰沟通对于让患者充分了解情况和维护患者自主权至关重要。最终,多学科的方法可以为甲状腺癌患者提供良好的护理,特别是在淋巴结转移的情况下。作者声明没有利益冲突。
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Virtual Tumor Board: Papillary thyroid carcinoma with nodal disease

The patient is a 19-year-old female who had an incidental thyroid nodule discovered on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in July 2020 during the work-up of a superficial, midline neck cellulitis. She reported having noticed a bulge in her neck a few years prior but had never been concerned about it. She began seeing an endocrinologist and underwent a thyroid ultrasound in July 2020, which revealed a solid, hypoechoic nodule in the left upper thyroid lobe measuring 2.2 cm in greatest dimension, classified as American College of Radiology Thyroid Imaging Reporting and Data System (ACR TI-RADS) 4 (Figure 1). Multiple, enlarged, abnormal-appearing lymph nodes were also noted in the left cervical lymph node chain in level IV (Figure 2). The lower pole of the left thyroid lobe was heterogeneous, with scattered calcifications and subcentimeter cystic areas, and no abnormal findings were noted in the isthmus or right lobe of the thyroid gland. Her thyroid function tests were normal, with a thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) level of 2.34 mU/L (reference range, 0.45–5.33 mU/L) and a T4 (thyroxine) level of 0.88 ng/dL (reference range, 0.58–1.64 μg/dL), with negative thyroid peroxidase antibodies and normal blood cell counts.

A fine-needle aspiration (FNA) of the left thyroid nodule was performed in September 2020 and revealed papillary thyroid cancer (PTC). The patient was then referred to the endocrine surgery clinic for evaluation and further management. An FNA biopsy of the concerning left lateral cervical lymph nodes (Figure 2) was conducted in the endocrine surgery clinic because it had not previously been performed. Given the concerning appearance of the lymph nodes on ultrasound, a total thyroidectomy with possible left central and lateral neck dissections was discussed as the likely operation pending pathology results from the lymph node biopsy. The patient agreed with the treatment plan, and FNA results from the lymph nodes returned as metastatic PTC.

Given the evidence of metastatic lymph node disease, the patient underwent a total thyroidectomy along with left central and lateral neck dissections in October 2020. Intraoperatively, a very firm nodule in the left lobe of the thyroid gland was encountered that was unable to be cleanly separated from the overlying sternothyroid muscle. Given concern for extrathyroidal extension, the muscle was resected en bloc with the thyroid specimen. During the dissection, there was concern for devascularization of the left superior parathyroid gland, so it was excised and re-implanted. However, there was significant lymphadenopathy low in cervical level VI surrounding the left inferior parathyroid gland, making clear identification of the inferior gland difficult. A frozen section was obtained that confirmed the identification of the left inferior parathyroid gland, so it was also re-implanted into the left sternocleidomastoid muscle. Bulky lymphadenopathy was found throughout the left central and lateral neck (levels II–VI) during the neck dissection.

Surgical pathology revealed a greatest tumor dimension of 4.5 cm with lymphovascular invasion but no extrathyroidal extension and clear resection margins. Five of the seven resected lymph nodes from the central neck and nine of the 19 nodes in the lateral neck showed PTC without extranodal extension. The overall pathologic stage was pT3aN1b.

Postoperatively, the patient experienced transient hypocalcemia, which required 8 weeks of calcium supplementation. Her 6-week postoperative thyroglobulin (Tg) level was 0.6 ng/mL in December 2020. A diagnostic whole-body scan in January 2021 revealed physiologic uptake in the thyroidectomy bed with no evidence of metastatic disease. She subsequently underwent radioactive iodine (RAI) therapy with 157.7 millicuries (mCi) of iodine-131 (131I), and her postablation scan similarly showed physiologic uptake in the thyroidectomy bed with no evidence of metastatic disease (Figures 3 and 4). Subsequent thyroid ultrasound studies in April and September of 2021 also showed no evidence of recurrent disease or suspicious findings throughout the thyroid bed or bilateral cervical chains I–VI. Her Tg level was undetectable (<0.1 ng/mL) in October 2021 after her RAI therapy.

At presentation, this is a young female with an incidentally diagnosed thyroid nodule. The initial evaluation for thyroid nodule(s) is comprised of a thorough history and physical examination, including evaluation for symptoms of hypothyroidism or hyperthyroidism. Pertinent history that increases the risk of malignancy includes a history of head or neck radiation, patient extremes of age (younger than 14 or older than 70 years), history of rapid growth of the nodule(s), persistent dysphonia, male gender,1 and significant family history of differentiated thyroid cancer, medullary thyroid cancer, or multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2.

The initial laboratory work-up to evaluate a thyroid nodule includes a TSH level. A suppressed or low TSH level, which signifies a hyperthyroid state, is associated with a decreased probability of malignancy (approximately 3%).2, 3 Conversely, an increased level of serum TSH, even when the level is still within reference limits, is statistically associated with an increased risk of cancer in thyroid nodular disease.4

A diagnostic thyroid ultrasound with evaluation of cervical lymph nodes is recommended for all patients with a known or suspected thyroid nodule.5 FNA is the procedure of choice for the histologic evaluation of thyroid nodules. The nodule size at initial ultrasound; the ultrasound characteristics, which include the composition (solid vs. cystic), echogenicity, shape, and margins of the nodule; and an increase in size during follow-up determine the need for FNA.6, 7 FNA is typically performed under ultrasound guidance to ensure optimal placement of the needle. In the United States, the two commonly used guidelines to estimate risk of malignancy and thus assess a need for FNA are the American Thyroid Association (ATA) guidelines8 and the ACR TI-RADS.6, 9 Both guidelines recommend biopsy if the thyroid nodule has high-suspicion sonographic features and is over a specific size threshold.10 In this patient, an FNA was indicated given her euthyroid state (normal TSH), her enlarged nodule size (>1 cm), concerning features on ultrasound (solid, hypoechoic), as well as the presence of abnormal-appearing lymph nodes in the left cervical lymph node chain level IV.11

Adjuvant therapy for thyroid cancer in the form of RAI is considered when patients have a higher risk of persistent or recurrent disease after surgical intervention.12 According to ATA guidelines, patients with gross extrathyroidal extension, incomplete tumor resection, lymph node metastasis >3 cm, the presence of extranodal extension, or distant metastases are deemed high-risk (30%–50% risk of recurrence) and are routinely considered for RAI. In addition, patients with aggressive histology, minor extrathyroidal extension, vascular invasion, or greater than five lymph node metastases in the central or lateral cervical compartments are considered intermediate-risk (10%–30% risk of recurrence) and are generally favored for RAI therapy.8 Intrathyroidal differentiated thyroid cancer with five or fewer lymph node micrometastases is generally considered low-risk (<5%–10% risk of recurrence), and RAI therapy is not recommended in these patients. Postoperative serum Tg can help in assessing the persistence of disease or thyroid remnant and predicting potential future disease recurrence. The Tg level reaches its nadir by 3–4 weeks postoperatively in most patients. At our institution, we routinely check the Tg level 4–6 weeks postoperatively as a surveillance marker and to guide further adjuvant therapy. The patient's tumor size, the presence of lymphovascular invasion, and the involvement of greater than five lymph nodes in the neck (<3 cm in size) placed her in the intermediate-risk category, so RAI therapy was recommended to reduce her risk of persistent or recurrent disease.

Obtaining an adequate assessment of the lymph node-bearing compartments in the central and lateral neck is essential to performing a sufficient thyroid operation. Lymph nodes that appear abnormal on cervical ultrasound need to be biopsied because the presence of lymph node metastases will affect the extent of surgical resection required, as it has been demonstrated that intraoperative frozen-section analysis of the thyroid gland is unreliable and thus should not be routinely performed.13 When the patient was first seen in the endocrine surgery clinic, biopsy of the concerning lymph nodes had not yet been completed, thus an FNA was performed during the initial endocrine surgery visit. To expedite care while awaiting the FNA pathology results, all operative possibilities were discussed with the patient during the initial visit, including lobectomy and total thyroidectomy with possible central and lateral neck dissections. Consent for the operation was obtained in the clinic, and the extent of the operation was confirmed by telephone after release of the FNA pathology result 1 week later. This expedited process allowed the patient to undergo her definitive operation, which was performed within 2 weeks of her initial surgical evaluation.

Although the presence of lymph node metastases was the primary driver for the decision to perform a total thyroidectomy, there were additional benefits, including the ability to perform postoperative RAI therapy and allowing for postoperative surveillance using the Tg level. These secondary benefits of removing the entire thyroid gland aided the multidisciplinary approach to the patient's care and allowed our nuclear medicine and endocrinology colleagues to provide additional therapy and closer monitoring.

At our institution, we often perform outpatient neck dissections and do not routinely leave a cervical drain.14 Our outpatient thyroidectomy patients have a parathyroid hormone (PTH) level drawn once they arrive at the postoperative anesthesia care unit (PACU) and are monitored postoperatively in the PACU for 2–4 hours before discharge. We have a protocol that specifies the doses of calcium and calcitriol with which to send patients home based on the PACU PTH level, which considers high-risk features, such as the presence of hyperthyroidism. Patients then follow-up in the clinic in 1–2 weeks with calcium and PTH levels drawn at that time. All total thyroidectomy patients are started on levothyroxine postoperatively with TSH and Tg levels drawn at 6 weeks postoperatively.

Multiple studies have demonstrated the safety of performing outpatient total thyroidectomy,14-17 and it has become an increasingly common practice among endocrine surgeons. Additional studies have demonstrated no difference in the complication rate when central and/or lateral neck dissections are concurrently performed with the total thyroidectomy, and increasing numbers of endocrine surgeons safely perform these operations on an outpatient basis.18-20 Similarly, studies have indicated that the placement of a drain does not reduce the risk of hematoma formation or other complications, including chyle leak, in post-thyroidectomy patients,21, 22 even after lateral neck dissection.23-26 Given our patient's lack of other comorbidities, any predisposing risk factor for a hematoma, or gross evidence of chyle leak intraoperatively, an outpatient operation without drain placement was chosen and successfully performed without complication.

The decision between a selective and modified radical neck dissection was another important one to consider in this patient. Some evidence suggests that a compartment-oriented lymphadenectomy is all that is needed for macroscopic nodal disease and that no benefit is gained by adding a complete level V dissection unless there is evidence of metastasis in level V or extensive (three-compartment) disease.27, 28 Our patient's nodal disease appeared to be limited to cervical levels III and IV, so she underwent a selective neck dissection of the lateral neck involving compartments II–IV with a partial level V dissection. This compartment-oriented dissection was performed to balance the removal of all macroscopic nodal disease with the attempt to minimize morbidity associated with radical neck dissections.

Radioiodine (131I) therapy has been used in the management of patients with well differentiated PTC or follicular thyroid cancer since the 1940s for remnant ablation and as adjuvant treatment for subclinical, residual tumor or for macroscopic, metastatic disease. Treatment benefits include enabling disease monitoring with serum Tg and radioiodine scans; and, in intermediate-risk and high-risk patients, there are added benefits of a decreased risk of recurrence and improved disease-specific, progression-free, and overall survival. The thyroid follicular cell has a unique ability to take up iodine from the blood through its membrane sodium-iodide transporter. After uptake by this active transport process, 131I causes acute thyroid cell death by the emission of short path-length (1–2 mm) beta particles. The identification and localization of uptake foci may be enhanced by a concomitant single-photon emission computed tomography/computed tomography (SPECT/CT) scan.8 Diagnostic whole-body scans (WBS) are acquired 1–3 days after RAI administration, whereas post-RAI treatment images can be obtained 2–7 days after treatment.29

The routine use of a preablation or diagnostic WBS with SPECT/CT is controversial, and there continues to be discussion on the utility of postoperative RAI diagnostic scanning (with or without SPECT/CT) in guiding RAI therapeutic decision making. According to the ATA, WBS may be useful when the extent of the thyroid remnant or residual disease cannot be accurately ascertained from the surgical report or neck ultrasonography and when the results may alter the decision to treat or the activity of RAI that is to be administered. For example, scan findings could suggest the need for additional surgery for resectable residual tumor or possibly could increase the administered activity if there is identification of otherwise unknown metastatic disease. Cons of WBS include the potential for stunning the thyroid follicular cells by the low dose of radioiodine used, which may lower uptake of the subsequent therapeutic radioiodine.30 In addition, it is well documented that a diagnostic, low-dose RAI scan is frequently falsely negative, but the post-131I therapy scan is positive for functioning 131I-avid metastases.12

Based on age-based TNM staging, the patient had stage I disease, but the ATA risk-stratification system put our patient at intermediate risk of persistent/recurrent disease because she had greater than five enlarged lateral neck nodes measuring ≤3 cm in greatest dimension.8, 31 For the treatment of thyroid cancer involving cervical lymph nodes, 131I activity in the range from 5.55 to 7.4 gigabecquerels (150–200 mCi) is typically administered to adults.30 According to ATA recommendations for adjuvant RAI therapy for suspected microscopic residual disease, it is uncertain whether routine use of higher administered activities (>150 mCi) will reduce structural disease recurrence for T3 and N1 disease.8 Therefore, 131I activity of approximately 150 mCi was selected for our patient. Figure 3 shows the posttherapy WBS with physiologic uptake in the thyroid bed and absence of radioiodine-avid nodal or distant metastatic disease. The small focus to the right of thyroid bed activity on the WBS (Figure 3, arrow) is artifactual from patient motion because the same is not seen on the static head and neck images (Figure 4).

As discussed above, nuclear medicine physicians are divided about the need for postoperative diagnostic low-activity radioiodine (1–3 mCi; 131I or 123I) WBS.29 If there were no remnants or other foci of iodine-avid tissue on the scan, then giving radioiodine would not be indicated; however, in high-risk patients, RAI treatment of occult metastases may be warranted.29 In our patient, the diagnostic scan was performed given the risk factors of muscle invasion and multiple nodal metastases. If additional resectable disease had been identified on the preablation scan, then referral to surgery would have been a reasonable consideration. Alternatively, if she had distant tumor spread (e.g. lung or bone) identified, then the administered radioiodine activity would have been increased. In her case, neither both the pretherapy and posttherapy scans did not identify additional resectable tumor or metastatic disease, and thus the treatment plan or 131I activity (150 mCi) was not altered.

PTC with nodal metastases is a complex disease that requires a multidisciplinary team approach. Adequate treatment of the disease requires the careful integration of multiple medical services, including endocrinology, endocrine surgery, and nuclear medicine. Clear communication between the various teams and the patient is essential to keeping the patient well informed and maintaining patient autonomy. Ultimately, a multidisciplinary approach can provide excellent care for patients with thyroid cancer and especially should be pursued in instances of lymph node metastases.

The authors declared no conflicts of interest.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
873.20
自引率
0.10%
发文量
51
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians" has been published by the American Cancer Society since 1950, making it one of the oldest peer-reviewed journals in oncology. It maintains the highest impact factor among all ISI-ranked journals. The journal effectively reaches a broad and diverse audience of health professionals, offering a unique platform to disseminate information on cancer prevention, early detection, various treatment modalities, palliative care, advocacy matters, quality-of-life topics, and more. As the premier journal of the American Cancer Society, it publishes mission-driven content that significantly influences patient care.
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