[Thyroid cancers] (original) (raw)
Revue médicale de Bruxelles, 2009
Abstract
During the last two decades, the incidence of thyroid cancer has doubled, mainly do to the early detection of small papillary tumors. However, mortality stayed stable (0.05/100.000). Well differentiated cancers (papillary and follicular) demonstrated a excellent survival prognosis (95 % at 30 years for the majority of the patients), factors of prognosis: age, size of the initial tumor, presence (or not) of distant metastases, lymph node involvement (only in patients 45 year or older). Surgery is the main treatment and should be with curative intent, hence the importance of a thorough preoperative work-up: sonography, needle aspiration cytology and MRI of cervicomediastinum for large tumors and/or suspected lymph nodes. Total thyroidectomy is mandatory, excepted for well selected patients with small (pT1) unilateral tumors under the age of 45. Central compartment lymph node clearance is advocated (but not evidence based) with presentation of the recurrent laryngeal nerves and of the ...
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