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Breast Cancer After Treatment of Differentiated Thyroid Cancer With Radioiodine in Young Females: What We Know and How to Investigate Open Questions. Review of the Literature and Results of a Multi-Registry Survey

Published studies on the risk of radiation-induced second primary malignancy (SPM) after radioiodine treatment (RAI) of differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) refer mainly to patients treated as middle-aged or older adults and are not easily generalizable to those treated at a younger age. Here we revi...

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Autores principales: Reiners, Christoph, Schneider, Rita, Platonova, Tamara, Fridman, Mikhail, Malzahn, Uwe, Mäder, Uwe, Vrachimis, Alexis, Bogdanova, Tatiana, Krajewska, Jolanta, Elisei, Rossella, Vaisman, Fernanda, Mihailovic, Jasna, Costa, Gracinda, Drozd, Valentina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7381297/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32754115
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2020.00381
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author Reiners, Christoph
Schneider, Rita
Platonova, Tamara
Fridman, Mikhail
Malzahn, Uwe
Mäder, Uwe
Vrachimis, Alexis
Bogdanova, Tatiana
Krajewska, Jolanta
Elisei, Rossella
Vaisman, Fernanda
Mihailovic, Jasna
Costa, Gracinda
Drozd, Valentina
author_facet Reiners, Christoph
Schneider, Rita
Platonova, Tamara
Fridman, Mikhail
Malzahn, Uwe
Mäder, Uwe
Vrachimis, Alexis
Bogdanova, Tatiana
Krajewska, Jolanta
Elisei, Rossella
Vaisman, Fernanda
Mihailovic, Jasna
Costa, Gracinda
Drozd, Valentina
author_sort Reiners, Christoph
collection PubMed
description Published studies on the risk of radiation-induced second primary malignancy (SPM) after radioiodine treatment (RAI) of differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) refer mainly to patients treated as middle-aged or older adults and are not easily generalizable to those treated at a younger age. Here we review available literature on the risk of breast cancer as an SPM after RAI of DTC with a focus on females undergoing such treatment in childhood, adolescence, or young adulthood. Additionally, we report the results of a preliminary international survey of patient registries from academic tertiary referral centers specializing in pediatric DTC. The survey sought to evaluate the availability of sufficient patient data for a potential international multicenter observational case–control study of females with DTC given RAI at an early age. Our literature review identified a bi-directional association of DTC and breast cancer. The general breast cancer risk in adult DTC survivors is low, ~2%, slightly higher in females than in males, but presumably lower, not higher, in those diagnosed as children or adolescents than in those diagnosed at older ages. RAI presumably does not substantially influence breast cancer risk after DTC. However, data from patients given RAI at young ages are sparse and insufficient to make definitive conclusions regarding age dependence of the risk of breast cancer as a SPM after RAI of DTC. The preliminary analysis of data from 10 thyroid cancer registries worldwide, including altogether 6,449 patients given RAI for DTC and 1,116 controls, i.e., patients not given RAI, did not show a significant increase of breast cancer incidence after RAI. However, the numbers of cases and controls were insufficient to draw statistically reliable conclusions, and the proportion of those receiving RAI at the earliest ages was too low.In conclusion, a potential international multicenter study of female patients undergoing RAI of DTC as children, adolescents, or young adults, with a sufficient sample size, is feasible. However, breast cancer screening of a larger cohort of DTC patients is not unproblematic for ethical reasons, due to the likely, at most slightly, increased risk of breast cancer post-RAI and the expected ~10% false-positivity rate which potentially produced substantial “misdiagnosis.”
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spelling pubmed-73812972020-08-03 Breast Cancer After Treatment of Differentiated Thyroid Cancer With Radioiodine in Young Females: What We Know and How to Investigate Open Questions. Review of the Literature and Results of a Multi-Registry Survey Reiners, Christoph Schneider, Rita Platonova, Tamara Fridman, Mikhail Malzahn, Uwe Mäder, Uwe Vrachimis, Alexis Bogdanova, Tatiana Krajewska, Jolanta Elisei, Rossella Vaisman, Fernanda Mihailovic, Jasna Costa, Gracinda Drozd, Valentina Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) Endocrinology Published studies on the risk of radiation-induced second primary malignancy (SPM) after radioiodine treatment (RAI) of differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) refer mainly to patients treated as middle-aged or older adults and are not easily generalizable to those treated at a younger age. Here we review available literature on the risk of breast cancer as an SPM after RAI of DTC with a focus on females undergoing such treatment in childhood, adolescence, or young adulthood. Additionally, we report the results of a preliminary international survey of patient registries from academic tertiary referral centers specializing in pediatric DTC. The survey sought to evaluate the availability of sufficient patient data for a potential international multicenter observational case–control study of females with DTC given RAI at an early age. Our literature review identified a bi-directional association of DTC and breast cancer. The general breast cancer risk in adult DTC survivors is low, ~2%, slightly higher in females than in males, but presumably lower, not higher, in those diagnosed as children or adolescents than in those diagnosed at older ages. RAI presumably does not substantially influence breast cancer risk after DTC. However, data from patients given RAI at young ages are sparse and insufficient to make definitive conclusions regarding age dependence of the risk of breast cancer as a SPM after RAI of DTC. The preliminary analysis of data from 10 thyroid cancer registries worldwide, including altogether 6,449 patients given RAI for DTC and 1,116 controls, i.e., patients not given RAI, did not show a significant increase of breast cancer incidence after RAI. However, the numbers of cases and controls were insufficient to draw statistically reliable conclusions, and the proportion of those receiving RAI at the earliest ages was too low.In conclusion, a potential international multicenter study of female patients undergoing RAI of DTC as children, adolescents, or young adults, with a sufficient sample size, is feasible. However, breast cancer screening of a larger cohort of DTC patients is not unproblematic for ethical reasons, due to the likely, at most slightly, increased risk of breast cancer post-RAI and the expected ~10% false-positivity rate which potentially produced substantial “misdiagnosis.” Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-07-10 /pmc/articles/PMC7381297/ /pubmed/32754115 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2020.00381 Text en Copyright © 2020 Reiners, Schneider, Platonova, Fridman, Malzahn, Mäder, Vrachimis, Bogdanova, Krajewska, Elisei, Vaisman, Mihailovic, Costa and Drozd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Endocrinology
Reiners, Christoph
Schneider, Rita
Platonova, Tamara
Fridman, Mikhail
Malzahn, Uwe
Mäder, Uwe
Vrachimis, Alexis
Bogdanova, Tatiana
Krajewska, Jolanta
Elisei, Rossella
Vaisman, Fernanda
Mihailovic, Jasna
Costa, Gracinda
Drozd, Valentina
Breast Cancer After Treatment of Differentiated Thyroid Cancer With Radioiodine in Young Females: What We Know and How to Investigate Open Questions. Review of the Literature and Results of a Multi-Registry Survey
title Breast Cancer After Treatment of Differentiated Thyroid Cancer With Radioiodine in Young Females: What We Know and How to Investigate Open Questions. Review of the Literature and Results of a Multi-Registry Survey
title_full Breast Cancer After Treatment of Differentiated Thyroid Cancer With Radioiodine in Young Females: What We Know and How to Investigate Open Questions. Review of the Literature and Results of a Multi-Registry Survey
title_fullStr Breast Cancer After Treatment of Differentiated Thyroid Cancer With Radioiodine in Young Females: What We Know and How to Investigate Open Questions. Review of the Literature and Results of a Multi-Registry Survey
title_full_unstemmed Breast Cancer After Treatment of Differentiated Thyroid Cancer With Radioiodine in Young Females: What We Know and How to Investigate Open Questions. Review of the Literature and Results of a Multi-Registry Survey
title_short Breast Cancer After Treatment of Differentiated Thyroid Cancer With Radioiodine in Young Females: What We Know and How to Investigate Open Questions. Review of the Literature and Results of a Multi-Registry Survey
title_sort breast cancer after treatment of differentiated thyroid cancer with radioiodine in young females: what we know and how to investigate open questions. review of the literature and results of a multi-registry survey
topic Endocrinology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7381297/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32754115
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2020.00381
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