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MON-502 Clinical-Pathological and Molecular Prognostic Markers in Aggressive and Poorly Differentiated Thyroid Cancers; A Tertiary-Center Experience
Background: Aggressive variants of papillary thyroid cancer (AV-PTC) and poorly differentiated thyroid cancers (PDTC) are 2 malignancies that lie in between the well-differentiated and the undifferentiated anaplastic cancers. While management of those well-differentiated cancers is established in th...
Autores principales: | , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Oxford University Press
2020
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7209703/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.889 |
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author | Radi, Suhaib Filimon, Sabin Tamilia, Michael |
author_facet | Radi, Suhaib Filimon, Sabin Tamilia, Michael |
author_sort | Radi, Suhaib |
collection | PubMed |
description | Background: Aggressive variants of papillary thyroid cancer (AV-PTC) and poorly differentiated thyroid cancers (PDTC) are 2 malignancies that lie in between the well-differentiated and the undifferentiated anaplastic cancers. While management of those well-differentiated cancers is established in the literature, that of AV-PTC and PDTC is less clear as they behave different to their more benign counterparts. The aim of this study is to describe the clinico-pathologic characteristics and genotypic background of AV-PTC and PDTC and to assess their prognostic value. Methods: The charts of all patients with thyroid cancer in our center for the last 10 years were retrospectively reviewed. Those with AV-PTC and PDTC were selected and included in the analysis. Clinical presentation, pathologic characteristics, molecular markers, specific treatments and clinical outcomes were compared among groups. Results: Out of 3244 thyroid cancer charts reviewed, 87 patients met the criteria for AV-PTC (n=45) and PDTC (n=42). Mean age at diagnosis was 48.1 years (SD 17.8), with female predominance (64.4% vs 35.6%). Median duration of follow up was 3 years (0.1-30). Out of the 75 patients with follow up for more than a year, 42.7% had either persistent disease or recurrence (52.6% in AV-PTC and 32.4% in PDTC) and 4.1% died. Presence of vascular invasion was associated with higher rates of persistent or recurrent disease (74.1% in positive vascular invasion vs 20.5% in negative vascular invasion, p < 0.001). Recurrence rate was 0% in patients with Ki67 < 10% and 40% in those >= 10%. There was no difference in terms of recurrence based on presence of BRAF mutation (33% in BRAF+ & 29% in BRAF-, p=1), or percentage of aggressive/poorly differentiated tumor involvement (48% in > 30% involvement vs 28% in < 30%, p = 0.132). Discussion and conclusion: The prevalence of AV-PTC and PDTC in this cohort was low at 1.3% each, and the rate of patients with persistent or recurrent disease at 1 year after primary therapy was also similar to that reported (42.7%). The mortality rates, however, in our study is surprisingly lower than that expected elsewhere (4.1%), most likely attributed to a shorter follow up period. Patients with absent vascular invasion were less likely to have persistent or recurrent disease. Those with lower Ki67 (<10%) also had lower relapse rate, although, the p value was > 0.05. It is worth mentioning that even though there were higher rates of recurrence among those with > 30% tumor involvement, it did not reach statistical significance, supporting recent studies stating that even tumor involvement of > 10% can have adverse outcomes. In conclusion, AV-PTC and PDTC are relatively rare but aggressive tumors. Possible prognostic markers that can be used to guide therapy and monitoring include: vascular invasion, extra-thyroidal extension, response to primary therapy and the proliferative index Ki67. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-7209703 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2020 |
publisher | Oxford University Press |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-72097032020-05-13 MON-502 Clinical-Pathological and Molecular Prognostic Markers in Aggressive and Poorly Differentiated Thyroid Cancers; A Tertiary-Center Experience Radi, Suhaib Filimon, Sabin Tamilia, Michael J Endocr Soc Thyroid Background: Aggressive variants of papillary thyroid cancer (AV-PTC) and poorly differentiated thyroid cancers (PDTC) are 2 malignancies that lie in between the well-differentiated and the undifferentiated anaplastic cancers. While management of those well-differentiated cancers is established in the literature, that of AV-PTC and PDTC is less clear as they behave different to their more benign counterparts. The aim of this study is to describe the clinico-pathologic characteristics and genotypic background of AV-PTC and PDTC and to assess their prognostic value. Methods: The charts of all patients with thyroid cancer in our center for the last 10 years were retrospectively reviewed. Those with AV-PTC and PDTC were selected and included in the analysis. Clinical presentation, pathologic characteristics, molecular markers, specific treatments and clinical outcomes were compared among groups. Results: Out of 3244 thyroid cancer charts reviewed, 87 patients met the criteria for AV-PTC (n=45) and PDTC (n=42). Mean age at diagnosis was 48.1 years (SD 17.8), with female predominance (64.4% vs 35.6%). Median duration of follow up was 3 years (0.1-30). Out of the 75 patients with follow up for more than a year, 42.7% had either persistent disease or recurrence (52.6% in AV-PTC and 32.4% in PDTC) and 4.1% died. Presence of vascular invasion was associated with higher rates of persistent or recurrent disease (74.1% in positive vascular invasion vs 20.5% in negative vascular invasion, p < 0.001). Recurrence rate was 0% in patients with Ki67 < 10% and 40% in those >= 10%. There was no difference in terms of recurrence based on presence of BRAF mutation (33% in BRAF+ & 29% in BRAF-, p=1), or percentage of aggressive/poorly differentiated tumor involvement (48% in > 30% involvement vs 28% in < 30%, p = 0.132). Discussion and conclusion: The prevalence of AV-PTC and PDTC in this cohort was low at 1.3% each, and the rate of patients with persistent or recurrent disease at 1 year after primary therapy was also similar to that reported (42.7%). The mortality rates, however, in our study is surprisingly lower than that expected elsewhere (4.1%), most likely attributed to a shorter follow up period. Patients with absent vascular invasion were less likely to have persistent or recurrent disease. Those with lower Ki67 (<10%) also had lower relapse rate, although, the p value was > 0.05. It is worth mentioning that even though there were higher rates of recurrence among those with > 30% tumor involvement, it did not reach statistical significance, supporting recent studies stating that even tumor involvement of > 10% can have adverse outcomes. In conclusion, AV-PTC and PDTC are relatively rare but aggressive tumors. Possible prognostic markers that can be used to guide therapy and monitoring include: vascular invasion, extra-thyroidal extension, response to primary therapy and the proliferative index Ki67. Oxford University Press 2020-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7209703/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.889 Text en © Endocrine Society 2020. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com |
spellingShingle | Thyroid Radi, Suhaib Filimon, Sabin Tamilia, Michael MON-502 Clinical-Pathological and Molecular Prognostic Markers in Aggressive and Poorly Differentiated Thyroid Cancers; A Tertiary-Center Experience |
title | MON-502 Clinical-Pathological and Molecular Prognostic Markers in Aggressive and Poorly Differentiated Thyroid Cancers; A Tertiary-Center Experience |
title_full | MON-502 Clinical-Pathological and Molecular Prognostic Markers in Aggressive and Poorly Differentiated Thyroid Cancers; A Tertiary-Center Experience |
title_fullStr | MON-502 Clinical-Pathological and Molecular Prognostic Markers in Aggressive and Poorly Differentiated Thyroid Cancers; A Tertiary-Center Experience |
title_full_unstemmed | MON-502 Clinical-Pathological and Molecular Prognostic Markers in Aggressive and Poorly Differentiated Thyroid Cancers; A Tertiary-Center Experience |
title_short | MON-502 Clinical-Pathological and Molecular Prognostic Markers in Aggressive and Poorly Differentiated Thyroid Cancers; A Tertiary-Center Experience |
title_sort | mon-502 clinical-pathological and molecular prognostic markers in aggressive and poorly differentiated thyroid cancers; a tertiary-center experience |
topic | Thyroid |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7209703/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.889 |
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