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Pathological Analysis of Encased Resected Recurrent Nerves in Locally Invasive Thyroid Cancer

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Thyroid cancer encasing the recurrent nerve is rare, and the decision to resect or preserve the nerve is multifactorial. The aim of this retrospective study was to evaluate the rate of actual invasion of the nerve beyond the nerve sheath in cancers encasing the nerve. Fifty-two patie...

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Autores principales: Dahan, Alexandre, Al Ghuzlan, Abir, Chehab, Randa, Guerlain, Joanne, Breuskin, Ingrid, Garcia, Camilo, Lamartina, Livia, Hadoux, Julien, Baudin, Eric, Hartl, Dana M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9221102/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35740626
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14122961
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author Dahan, Alexandre
Al Ghuzlan, Abir
Chehab, Randa
Guerlain, Joanne
Breuskin, Ingrid
Garcia, Camilo
Lamartina, Livia
Hadoux, Julien
Baudin, Eric
Hartl, Dana M.
author_facet Dahan, Alexandre
Al Ghuzlan, Abir
Chehab, Randa
Guerlain, Joanne
Breuskin, Ingrid
Garcia, Camilo
Lamartina, Livia
Hadoux, Julien
Baudin, Eric
Hartl, Dana M.
author_sort Dahan, Alexandre
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Thyroid cancer encasing the recurrent nerve is rare, and the decision to resect or preserve the nerve is multifactorial. The aim of this retrospective study was to evaluate the rate of actual invasion of the nerve beyond the nerve sheath in cancers encasing the nerve. Fifty-two patients were included: 7 cases of medullary thyroid carcinoma, 8 papillary thyroid carcinomas in children and 37 follicular derived cancers in adults. Tumor-related vocal fold paralysis was present in 30% of cases. The nerve was invaded in 82% of follicular cell-derived tumors, 88% of pediatric cases, and 100% of medullary carcinomas. Only agressive histology was a risk factor for nerve invasion. Vocal fold paralysis was not predictive. To our knowledge, this is one of the largest series with pathologic analysis of resected recurrent nerves, showing a high rate of nerve invasion in these rare cases of cancer encasing the reucrrent nerve. ABSTRACT: Objective: Thyroid cancer encasing the recurrent nerve is rare, and the decision to resect or preserve the nerve is multifactorial. The objective of this study was to histopathologically analyze resected encased nerves to assess the rate of nerve invasion and risk factors. Materials and Methods: A retrospective study was carried out on consecutive patients with resection of the recurrent nerve for primary or recurrent follicular cell-derived or medullary thyroid carcinoma from 2005 to 2020. Demographics, pathology, locoregional invasion, metastases, recurrences and survival were analyzed. Slides were reviewed blindly by two specialized pathologists (AAG, RC) for diagnosis of invasion deep to the epineurium. Results: Fifty-two patients were included: 25 females; average age, 55 (range 8–87). In total, 87% percent (45/52) were follicular cell-derived with 17/45 (37.8%) aggressive variants; 13% (7/52) were medullary carcinoma. Preoperative vocal fold (VF) paralysis was present in 16/52 (30.7%). Pathologically, the nerve was invaded in 44/52 cases (85%): 82% of follicular cell-derived tumors (37/45), 88% of pediatric cases, and 100% of medullary carcinomas (7/7). Nerve invasion was observed in 11/16 (69%) with preoperative VF paralysis and 33/36 (92%) with normal VF function. Only aggressive histology was correlated with nerve invasion in follicular cell-derived tumors (p = 0.019). Conclusions: The encased nerves were pathologically invaded in 82% of follicular cell-derived tumors and in 100% of medullary carcinomas. Nerve invasion was statistically correlated with aggressive histopathological subtypes and was observed in the absence of VF paralysis in 92% of cases.
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spelling pubmed-92211022022-06-24 Pathological Analysis of Encased Resected Recurrent Nerves in Locally Invasive Thyroid Cancer Dahan, Alexandre Al Ghuzlan, Abir Chehab, Randa Guerlain, Joanne Breuskin, Ingrid Garcia, Camilo Lamartina, Livia Hadoux, Julien Baudin, Eric Hartl, Dana M. Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Thyroid cancer encasing the recurrent nerve is rare, and the decision to resect or preserve the nerve is multifactorial. The aim of this retrospective study was to evaluate the rate of actual invasion of the nerve beyond the nerve sheath in cancers encasing the nerve. Fifty-two patients were included: 7 cases of medullary thyroid carcinoma, 8 papillary thyroid carcinomas in children and 37 follicular derived cancers in adults. Tumor-related vocal fold paralysis was present in 30% of cases. The nerve was invaded in 82% of follicular cell-derived tumors, 88% of pediatric cases, and 100% of medullary carcinomas. Only agressive histology was a risk factor for nerve invasion. Vocal fold paralysis was not predictive. To our knowledge, this is one of the largest series with pathologic analysis of resected recurrent nerves, showing a high rate of nerve invasion in these rare cases of cancer encasing the reucrrent nerve. ABSTRACT: Objective: Thyroid cancer encasing the recurrent nerve is rare, and the decision to resect or preserve the nerve is multifactorial. The objective of this study was to histopathologically analyze resected encased nerves to assess the rate of nerve invasion and risk factors. Materials and Methods: A retrospective study was carried out on consecutive patients with resection of the recurrent nerve for primary or recurrent follicular cell-derived or medullary thyroid carcinoma from 2005 to 2020. Demographics, pathology, locoregional invasion, metastases, recurrences and survival were analyzed. Slides were reviewed blindly by two specialized pathologists (AAG, RC) for diagnosis of invasion deep to the epineurium. Results: Fifty-two patients were included: 25 females; average age, 55 (range 8–87). In total, 87% percent (45/52) were follicular cell-derived with 17/45 (37.8%) aggressive variants; 13% (7/52) were medullary carcinoma. Preoperative vocal fold (VF) paralysis was present in 16/52 (30.7%). Pathologically, the nerve was invaded in 44/52 cases (85%): 82% of follicular cell-derived tumors (37/45), 88% of pediatric cases, and 100% of medullary carcinomas (7/7). Nerve invasion was observed in 11/16 (69%) with preoperative VF paralysis and 33/36 (92%) with normal VF function. Only aggressive histology was correlated with nerve invasion in follicular cell-derived tumors (p = 0.019). Conclusions: The encased nerves were pathologically invaded in 82% of follicular cell-derived tumors and in 100% of medullary carcinomas. Nerve invasion was statistically correlated with aggressive histopathological subtypes and was observed in the absence of VF paralysis in 92% of cases. MDPI 2022-06-15 /pmc/articles/PMC9221102/ /pubmed/35740626 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14122961 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Dahan, Alexandre
Al Ghuzlan, Abir
Chehab, Randa
Guerlain, Joanne
Breuskin, Ingrid
Garcia, Camilo
Lamartina, Livia
Hadoux, Julien
Baudin, Eric
Hartl, Dana M.
Pathological Analysis of Encased Resected Recurrent Nerves in Locally Invasive Thyroid Cancer
title Pathological Analysis of Encased Resected Recurrent Nerves in Locally Invasive Thyroid Cancer
title_full Pathological Analysis of Encased Resected Recurrent Nerves in Locally Invasive Thyroid Cancer
title_fullStr Pathological Analysis of Encased Resected Recurrent Nerves in Locally Invasive Thyroid Cancer
title_full_unstemmed Pathological Analysis of Encased Resected Recurrent Nerves in Locally Invasive Thyroid Cancer
title_short Pathological Analysis of Encased Resected Recurrent Nerves in Locally Invasive Thyroid Cancer
title_sort pathological analysis of encased resected recurrent nerves in locally invasive thyroid cancer
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9221102/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35740626
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14122961
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