Active surveillance for small papillary thyroid cancers should be used with caution
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Active surveillance without surgery may not be the most appropriate approach for patients with small papillary thyroid cancers, according to a population-based study.
Thyroid cancer is the most common endocrine malignancy, accounting for 3.8% of all new cancer diagnoses, according to study background information. It is the fifth most common cancer diagnosed in women, and its age-adjusted and sex-adjusted incidence has increased faster than any malignancy in the past decade.
Since 2004, incidence has increased by 5.6% in men and 7% among women; however, men tend to have a more advanced stage of thyroid cancer at an older age, and they typically demonstrate shorter DFS and higher mortality.
Yet, some centers have advocated for patients with small papillary thyroid cancer to follow a course of active surveillance in lieu of surgery.
Naris Nilubol, MD, FACS, and Electron Kebebew, MD, FACS, both of the endocrine oncology branch at the National Cancer Institute, analyzed the impact of small papillary thyroid (tumors ≤ 2 cm in dimension) on thyroid cancer-related mortality.
Researchers used the SEER database to identify 61,523 patients from 17 registries who had histologically confirmed thyroid cancer of follicular cell origin between 1988 and 2007.
From that cohort, 1,753 patients (2.8%) died of thyroid cancer. Of those who died, more than one-third (38%) had papillary thyroid cancer, and 12.3% had papillary thyroid cancers ≤2 cm.
Among all patients with papillary thyroid cancers ≤2 cm, thyroid cancer mortality was significantly higher among men (30% vs. 17%: P<.01); those aged ≥45 years (92% vs. 52%; P<.01); those whose tumors measured larger than 1 cm (59% vs. 46%; P<.01); and those who demonstrated extrathyroid extension (41% vs. 11%; P<.01). Mortality also was higher among patients who developed lymph node metastases (77% vs. 28%; P<.01) and those who developed distant metastases (31% vs. 1%; P<.01).
Multivariate analysis showed several factors were independent prognostic factors for thyroid cancer-related mortality among patients with papillary thyroid cancer ≤2 cm. Those factors included age ≥45 years (HR=12.2; P<.01), extrathyroid extension (HR=2.8; P<.01), lymph node metastases (HR=5.4; P<.01), distant metastases (HR=6.4; P<.01), undergoing less than thyroid lobectomy (HR=13.7; P=.01), and receipt of either external radiotherapy (HR=8.9; P<.01) or the combination of external radiotherapy and radioisotopes (HR=8.1; P<.01).
“The current study demonstrates that 12.3% of deaths related to thyroid cancer occurred in patients with papillary thyroid cancers ≤2 cm who underwent thyroidectomy,” Nilubol and Kebebew wrote. “Given the rise in the incidence of small thyroid cancers, nonoperative management for this growing population of patients should be used with caution. Patients aged ≥45 years or men of any age with a papillary thyroid cancer ≤2 cm should undergo at least thyroid lobectomy.”
Disclosure: The study was supported by the Intramural Research Program of the Center for Cancer Research, the NCI and the NIH. The researchers report no relevant financial disclosures.