1. 'Incidental' and 'non-incidental' thyroid papillary microcarcinomas are two different entities.
- Author
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Provenzale MA, Fiore E, Ugolini C, Torregrossa L, Morganti R, Molinaro E, Miccoli P, Basolo F, and Vitti P
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Carcinoma, Papillary blood, Carcinoma, Papillary diagnostic imaging, Female, Goiter, Nodular blood, Goiter, Nodular diagnostic imaging, Humans, Incidental Findings, Male, Middle Aged, Thyroid Neoplasms blood, Thyroid Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Thyroid Nodule blood, Thyroid Nodule diagnostic imaging, Carcinoma, Papillary pathology, Goiter, Nodular pathology, Thyroid Neoplasms pathology, Thyroid Nodule pathology, Thyrotropin blood
- Abstract
Objective: Papillary thyroid microcarcinomas (microPTC) may be 'incidental' (Inc-microPTC), occasionally found at histology after surgery for benign disease or 'non-incidental' (Non-Inc-microPTC), diagnosed on clinical grounds. It is unclear whether these different microPTC reflect the same disease. The aim of the study was to compare Inc-microPTC and Non-Inc-microPTC for clinical and histological features as well as for serum TSH, a known factor involved in PTC development., Design: We evaluated histology and serum TSH levels of consecutive patients submitted to thyroidectomy for goiter with compressive symptoms or for cytological diagnosis suspicious/indicative of PTC., Methods: In total, 665 consecutive patients (259 with a single thyroid nodule, SN and 406 with a multinodular gland, MN) were included in the study. According to histology, patients were classified as: benign nodular goiter (Benign, n=291); Inc-microPTC (n=92); Non-Inc-microPTC (n=67) and PTC≥1cm (macroPTC, n=215)., Results: Inc-microPTC were significantly more frequent in MN than in SN (66/406, 16.2% vs 26/259, 10.0%, P=0.02). Patients with Inc-microPTC compared with Non-Inc-microPTC were older (mean age±s.d. 53.3±13.2 years vs 44.9±14.8 years, P=0.0002), had a smaller tumor size (median 4mm vs 9mm, P<0.0001), a higher frequency of multifocality (70/92, 76.1% vs 35/67, 52.2% P=0.001) and lower levels of TSH (median 0.6mIU/L, IR: 0.4-1.0mIU/L vs value 1. mIU/L, IR: 0.6-1.4mIU/L vs P=0.0001)., Conclusion: Incidental and non-incidental papillary thyroid microcarcinomas appear to be two different entities., (© 2016 European Society of Endocrinology.)
- Published
- 2016
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