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Minimal Extrathyroidal Extension in Predicting 1-Year Outcomes: A Longitudinal Multicenter Study of Low-to-Intermediate-Risk Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma (ITCO#4)

Authors :
Barbara Puligheddu
Loredana Pagano
Sebastiano Filetti
Giovanni Tallini
Giovanna Spiazzi
Andrea Repaci
Valentina Zilioli
Giorgio Grani
Silvia Morelli
Umberto Ferraro Petrillo
Dario Tumino
Luciano Pezzullo
Alberto Ragni
Efisio Puxeddu
Marco Alfò
Marco Centanni
Laura Fugazzola
R. Rossetto
Maria Grazia Castagna
Raffaele Giubbini
Clotilde Sparano
Anna Crescenzi
Raffaella Forleo
Massimo Torlontano
Celestino Pio Lombardi
Maurilio Deandrea
Alessandro Piovesan
Cosimo Durante
Fabio Monzani
Alessandro Antonelli
Rocco Bruno
Salvatore Monti
Maria Chiara Zatelli
Irene Gagliardi
Graziano Ceresini
Forleo, Raffaella
Grani, Giorgio
Alfò, Marco
Zilioli, Valentina
Giubbini, Raffaele
Zatelli, Maria Chiara
Gagliardi, Irene
Piovesan, Alessandro
Ragni, Alberto
Morelli, Silvia
Puxeddu, Efisio
Pagano, Loredana
Deandrea, Maurilio
Ceresini, Graziano
Torlontano, Massimo
Puligheddu, Barbara
Antonelli, Alessandro
Centanni, Marco
Fugazzola, Laura
Spiazzi, Giovanna
Monti, Salvatore
Rossetto, Ruth
Monzani, Fabio
Tallini, Giovanni
Crescenzi, Anna
Sparano, Clotilde
Bruno, Rocco
Repaci, Andrea
Tumino, Dario
Pezzullo, Luciano
Lombardi, Celestino Pio
Ferraro Petrillo, Umberto
Filetti, Sebastiano
Durante, Cosimo
Castagna, Maria Grazia
Source :
Thyroid : official journal of the American Thyroid Association. 31(12)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background: The role of minimal extrathyroidal extension (mETE) as a risk factor for persistent papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) is still debated. The aim of this study was to assess the clinical impact of mETE as a predictor of worse initial treatment response in PTC patients and to verify the impact of radioiodine therapy after surgery in patients with mETE. Methods: We reviewed all records in the Italian Thyroid Cancer Observatory (ITCO) database and selected 2237 consecutive patients with PTC who satisfied the inclusion criteria (PTC with no lymph node metastases and at least 1 year of follow-up). For each case, we considered initial surgery, histological variant of PTC, tumor diameter, recurrence risk class according to the American Thyroid Association (ATA) risk stratification system, use of radioiodine therapy, and initial therapy response, as suggested by ATA guidelines. Results: At 1-year follow-up, 1831 patients (81.8%) had an excellent response, 296 (13.2%) had an indeterminate response, 55 (2.5%) had a biochemical incomplete response, and 55 (2.5%) had a structural incomplete response. Statistical analysis suggested that mETE (odds ratio [OR] 1.16, p=0.65), tumor size >2 cm (OR 1.45, p=0.34), aggressive PTC histology (OR 0.55, p=0.15), and age at diagnosis (OR 0.90, p=0.32) were not significant risk factors for a worse initial therapy response. When evaluating the combination of mETE, tumor size, and aggressive PTC histology, the presence of mETE with a >2 cm tumor was significantly associated with a worse outcome (OR 5.27, 95% CI, p=0.014). The role of radioiodine ablation in patients with mETE was also evaluated. When considering radioiodine treatment, propensity score-based matching was performed, and no significant differences were found between treated and non-treated patients (p=0.24). Conclusions: This study failed to show the prognostic value of mETE in predicting initial therapy response in a large cohort of PTC patients without lymph node metastases. The study suggests that the combination of tumor diameter and mETE can be used as a reliable prognostic factor for persistence and could be easily applied in clinical practice to manage PTC patients with low-to-intermediate risk of recurrent/persistent disease.

Details

ISSN :
15579077
Volume :
31
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Thyroid : official journal of the American Thyroid Association
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8715aa58429e753bc54b287a22a2077f