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Personalized Management of Malignant and Non-Malignant Ectopic Mediastinal Thyroid: A Proposed 10-Item Algorithm Approach.

Authors :
Carsote, Mara
Ciobica, Mihai-Lucian
Sima, Oana-Claudia
Ciuche, Adrian
Popa-Velea, Ovidiu
Stanciu, Mihaela
Popa, Florina Ligia
Nistor, Claudiu
Source :
Cancers. May2024, Vol. 16 Issue 10, p1868. 58p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Simple Summary: A large body of multidisciplinary evidence involves the topic of thyroid cancer (the most common endocrine malignancy). Nevertheless, exceptional findings such as thyroid cancer in ectopic thyroid tissue, representing 0.3–0.5% of the malignant neoplasia with any location, suggest even greater challenges. Awareness remains the key operative element since the index of suspicion is low, especially in non-cervical areas. Hence, currently, the ectopic thyroid remains a matter of individualized management. The ectopic mediastinal thyroid (EMT) is part of the less frequent sublingual ectopic sites. Here, we introduce the most complex analysis in published EMT data (N = 117 patients) that identified an unexpectedly high rate of malignancy (18.8%), papillary cancer being the most frequent histological type. A rate of 5.98% amid all EMTs represented individuals confirmed with unrelated (non-thyroid) malignancies. Thyroid anomalies (other than EMT presence) were reported in 38.33% of the benign EMT, while the overall malignancy rate in EMTs was higher than expected according to prior data when compared to other ectopic sites. We aimed to analyze the management of the ectopic mediastinal thyroid (EMT) with respect to EMT-related cancer and non-malignant findings related to the pathological report, clinical presentation, imaging traits, endocrine profile, connective tissue to the cervical (eutopic) thyroid gland, biopsy or fine needle aspiration (FNA) results, surgical techniques and post-operatory outcome. This was a comprehensive review based on revising any type of freely PubMed-accessible English, full-length original papers including the keywords "ectopic thyroid" and "mediastinum" from inception until March 2024. We included 89 original articles that specified EMTs data. We classified them into four main groups: (I) studies/case series (n = 10; N = 36 EMT patients); (II) malignant EMTs (N = 22 subjects; except for one newborn with immature teratoma in the EMT, only adults were reported; mean age of 62.94 years; ranges: 34 to 90 years; female to male ratio of 0.9). Histological analysis in adults showed the following: papillary (N = 11/21); follicular variant of the papillary type (N = 2/21); Hürthle cell thyroid follicular malignancy (N = 1/21); poorly differentiated (N = 1/21); anaplastic (N = 2/21); medullary (N = 1/21); lymphoma (N = 2/21); and MALT (mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue) (N = 1/21); (III) benign EMTs with no thyroid anomalies (N = 37 subjects; mean age of 56.32 years; ranges: 30 to 80 years; female to male ratio of 1.8); (IV) benign EMTs with thyroid anomalies (N = 23; female to male ratio of 5.6; average age of 52.1 years). This panel involved clinical/subclinical hypothyroidism (iatrogenic, congenital, thyroiditis-induced, and transitory type upon EMT removal); thyrotoxicosis (including autonomous activity in EMTs that suppressed eutopic gland); autoimmune thyroiditis/Graves's disease; nodules/multinodular goiter and cancer in eutopic thyroid or prior thyroidectomy (before EMT detection). We propose a 10-item algorithm that might help navigate through the EMT domain. To conclude, across this focused-sample analysis (to our knowledge, the largest of its kind) of EMTs, the EMT clinical index of suspicion remains low; a higher rate of cancer is reported than prior data (18.8%), incident imagery-based detection was found in 10–14% of the EMTs; surgery offered an overall good outcome. A wide range of imagery, biopsy/FNA and surgical procedures is part of an otherwise complex personalized management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20726694
Volume :
16
Issue :
10
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Cancers
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177490636
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16101868