Abstracts
The aims of these recommendations were to develop clinical guidelines for evaluation and management of patients with differentiated thyroid cancer applicable to Latin American countries. The panel was composed by 13 members of the Latin American Thyroid Society (LATS) involved with research and management of thyroid cancer from different medical centers in Latin America. The recommendations were produced on the basis of the expert opinion of the panel with use of principles of Evidence-Based Medicine. Following a group meeting, a first draft based on evidences and the expert opinions of the panel was elaborated and, later, circulated among panel members, for further revision. After, this document was submitted to the LATS members, for commentaries and considerations, and, finally, revised and refined by the authors. The final recommendations presented in this paper represent the state of the art on management of differentiated thyroid cancer applied to all Latin American countries.
Thyroid cancer; thyroid ultrasonography; radioiodine therapy; thyroglobulin; consensus
Estas recomendações tiveram por objetivo o desenvolvimento de diretrizes para avaliação e manejo de pacientes com câncer diferenciado da tiroide em países latino-americanos. Um painel composto por 13 membros da Sociedade Latino-Americana de Tireoide (SLAT) - que estavam envolvidos em pesquisas, e eram peritos no cuidado do paciente com câncer da tiroide e provenientes de diferentes centros médicos latino-americanos - utilizou os princípios da Medicina Baseada em Evidências para produzir esse consenso. Após uma primeira reunião, um texto inicial foi elaborado, baseado em evidências e opiniões dos especialistas do painel e, posteriormente, circulado entre os membros do painel, para revisão. Após a revisão, o documento foi enviado aos membros da SLAT para comentários e considerações e, finalmente, revisado e refinado pelos autores. As recomendações finais aqui apresentadas demonstram o estado da arte no manejo do câncer diferenciado da tireoide aplicadas aos países latino-americanos.
Carcinoma da tireoide; ultrassonografia da tireoide; radioiodoterapia; tiroglobulina; consensus
UPDATE ARTICLE
Recommendations of the Latin American Thyroid Society on diagnosis and management of differentiated thyroid cancer
Recomendações da Sociedade Latino-Americana de Tireoide para diagnóstico e manejo do carcinoma diferenciado de tireoide
Fabián PitoiaI; Laura WardII; Nelson WohllkIII; Celso FrigugliettiIV; Eduardo TomimoriV; Alicia GaunaVI; Rosalinda CamargoV; Mario VaismanVII; Rubén HarachVIII; Fernando MunizagaIII; Sandro CoriglianoIX; Eduardo PretellIX; Hugo NiepomniszczeI
IDivisión Endocrinologia, Hospital de Clínicas, Universidad de Buenos Aires (UBA), Buenos Aires, Argentina*
IILaboratório de Genética Molecular do Câncer, Faculdade de Ciências Médicas (FCM), Universidade Estadual de Campinas (Unicamp), Campinas, SP, Brasil*
IIISección Endocrinologia, Universidad do Chile, Santiago do Chile, Chile
IVDepartamento de Cabeça e Pescoço, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de Santo Amaro (Unisa), São Paulo, SP, Brasil
VDivisão de Endocrinologia, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de São Paulo (USP), São Paulo, SP, Brasil
VIDivisión Endocrinologia, Hospital Ramos Mejía, Buenos Aires, Argentina
VIIServiço Endocrinologia, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ), Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brasil
VIIIServicio de Patología, Hospital Oñativia, Salta, Argentina
IXInstituto de Investigaciones de la Altura, Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Lima, Perú
Correspondence Correspondence: Fabián Pitoia Córdoba 2351 5to Piso Buenos Aires, Argentina fpitoia@intramed.net
ABSTRACT
The aims of these recommendations were to develop clinical guidelines for evaluation and management of patients with differentiated thyroid cancer applicable to Latin American countries. The panel was composed by 13 members of the Latin American Thyroid Society (LATS) involved with research and management of thyroid cancer from different medical centers in Latin America. The recommendations were produced on the basis of the expert opinion of the panel with use of principles of Evidence-Based Medicine. Following a group meeting, a first draft based on evidences and the expert opinions of the panel was elaborated and, later, circulated among panel members, for further revision. After, this document was submitted to the LATS members, for commentaries and considerations, and, finally, revised and refined by the authors. The final recommendations presented in this paper represent the state of the art on management of differentiated thyroid cancer applied to all Latin American countries.
Keywords: 'Thyroid cancer; thyroid ultrasonography; radioiodine therapy; thyroglobulin; consensus
RESUMO
Estas recomendações tiveram por objetivo o desenvolvimento de diretrizes para avaliação e manejo de pacientes com câncer diferenciado da tiroide em países latino-americanos. Um painel composto por 13 membros da Sociedade Latino-Americana de Tireoide (SLAT) - que estavam envolvidos em pesquisas, e eram peritos no cuidado do paciente com câncer da tiroide e provenientes de diferentes centros médicos latino-americanos - utilizou os princípios da Medicina Baseada em Evidências para produzir esse consenso. Após uma primeira reunião, um texto inicial foi elaborado, baseado em evidências e opiniões dos especialistas do painel e, posteriormente, circulado entre os membros do painel, para revisão. Após a revisão, o documento foi enviado aos membros da SLAT para comentários e considerações e, finalmente, revisado e refinado pelos autores. As recomendações finais aqui apresentadas demonstram o estado da arte no manejo do câncer diferenciado da tireoide aplicadas aos países latino-americanos.
Descritores: Carcinoma da tireoide; ultrassonografia da tireoide; radioiodoterapia; tiroglobulina; consensus
INTRODUCTION
The risk of malignancy in a thyroid nodule varies between 5% and 10% in iodine sufficient countries, and the amount of iodine supplemented in table salt influences on the morphology of the malignant tumor types (1).
Programs of table salt iodination in many Latin American countries have produced important variations in iodine intake over the past few decades, and the impact of these changes on the behavior of thyroid nodules and cancer is still largely unknown (2). The popularization of ultrasonography (US) and the simplicity of the technique to serve as guidance for aspiration of nodules have contributed to the apparent increase in incidence of differentiated thyroid carcinoma, as well as modified the clinical presentation of the cases diagnosed in Latin America and all over the world (1,3).
New imaging technologies - especially US - have improved the sensitivity for detection of thyroid cancer, which is now often found incidentally on imaging studies performed for other indications. This has led to the identification of many patients with microscopic papillary thyroid cancers - mostly of no clinical significance (4).
New and refined surveillance approaches for patients with established diagnosis of thyroid cancer show that many patients who would be previously considered cured have, in fact, minimal residual disease.
Differentiated thyroid carcinoma (papillary and follicular) shows a wide spectrum of pathological subtypes according to the World Health Organization (WHO) system (5). Familial differentiated thyroid carcinoma may occur as site-specific tumors or as part of a hereditary tumor syndrome (for example: familial adenomatous polyposis, Cowden disease etc.). These are usually multicentric and occur mainly in young patients (6).
Although most patients with differentiated thyroid cancer have a favorable outcome, some are presenting with an aggressive form of the disease and a poor prognosis. Physicians in care of patients with thyroid carcinoma now have to grapple with a new array of issues that affect directly the decisions made in daily practice. A series of guidelines and consensus have been recently published; however, they are not always appropriate to different settings or countries.
Although the Argentinean and Brazilian endocrine societies have already published local guidelines for the follow-up and treatment of differentiated thyroid cancer (7,8), the rest of the Latin American countries have not. The idea of the Latin American Thyroid Society (LATS) was to generate common recommendations, according to the different economic and social actualities of the integrating Latin American countries.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
A set of recommendations for evaluation and management of patients with differentiated thyroid cancer has been developed by 13 members of the LATS. This panel was composed by individuals involved in research and management of thyroid nodules and cancer from distinct reference medical centers in Latin America to reflect different practice patterns.
A first questionnaire assessing the most important issues on the subject (Table 1) was firstly sent to all panel members. The first meeting of the taskforce was held on August, 24th 2007, in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Prior to the meeting, the panel undertook a literature review by searching MedLine database. The search was classified by relevance according to:
-
randomized trials;
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meta analysis;
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clinical case series.
After the first meeting, a draft was developed. This preliminary text was analyzed by the entire panel of experts, and a draft document, based on the bibliographic search and expert opinion of the panel's participants, as well as on previously published information, was elaborated and circulated among panel members for further revision. This document was subsequently sent to some LATS members, for comments and discussion.
A second meeting was held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on December 7th 2007. The text was finally revised and refined in complete agreement by the 13 panel members.
The final text aimed to represent the state of the art on thyroid cancer management applied to Latin American countries.
RESULTS
Preoperative staging
A series of studies with large cohorts of patients have demonstrated that age is a significant prognostic determinant in differentiated thyroid cancer (9). Other important factors included in most prognostic classifications are gender, tumor size on US evaluation, cytology (aggressive variants of papillary carcinoma), and evidence of extra-thyroidal invasion (10). These factors should be taken into consideration in planning for surgery.
US
Before surgery, the lobe contralateral to the tumor and the cervical area should be carefully evaluated by US in search of contralateral disease and suspicious lymph nodes at levels II, III, IV, V, and VI. It is noteworthy that the size of the tumor may be underestimated when measured by US evaluation. This is particularly important in nodules measuring less than 1 cm, in which partial thyroidectomy might be considered (9). Routine use of other imaging techniques, such as computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance (MRI), positron emission tomography (PET) scan are not recommended before surgery, but may be useful in selected patients with aggressive cancers presenting with local extension or distant metastases.
Laboratory tests
Routine measurement of serum Tg levels before surgery is not recommended. Many studies have suggested the determination of preoperative serum calcitonin levels for detection of medullary thyroid cancer, but the cost-effectiveness of this approach is still unclear (11). Preoperative calcitonin may be measured when follicular cell or Hürthle cell neoplasia is suspected on FNAB, since medullary carcinoma with oncocytic features and with neoplastic follicular cell component may present that way (11).
The panel recommends the ultrasonographic neck evaluation previous to surgery but oppose to the measurement of thyroglobulin as a prognostic or diagnostic study before surgery.
Surgical treatment
The panel discussed very carefully this topic: a less aggressive surgical treatment (such as lobectomy plus isthmectomy, for example) is proposed by some, for low-risk patients with the argument that this approach may help preserve thyroid function and spare some patients from lifelong thyroid hormone replacement. However, L-T4 therapy is required in 50% of the patients immediately after lobectomy (12). In a majority of these patients, L-T4 is ultimately required lifelong. Also, recurrence rates for patients with papillary carcinoma treated with lobectomy plus isthmectomy are higher than for those undergoing total thyroidectomy according to some (13) - but not all (14) - studies. There are a surprisingly high number of patients with papillary microcarcinomas (< 1 cm) with bilateral or multifocal disease, indicating that, even when these tumors are small in size, there is risk of leaving behind residual tumor in the contralateral lobe after hemithyroidectomy. Besides, performing total thyroidectomy at the time of diagnosis prevents the need for an additional surgical procedure in case of contralateral disease developed in the future. Patients with small (< 2 cm) single nodules located far from the gland capsule and with no signs of extension are considered low risk for progression and, sometimes, referred for partial thyroidectomy. However, the prevalence of recurrence in these patients is not negligible (15,16).
Taking into consideration the current lack of reliable markers of tumor progression and the fact that papillary microcarcinomas may occasionally be multifocal, invade the thyroid capsule, or present with lymph node or distant metastases (16), the panel recommends total thyroidectomy for differentiated thyroid carcinomas independent of size.
Although some patients may be over-treated by this approach, the panel considers that total thyroidectomy allows an adequate follow-up by permitting reliable Tg measurements.
There is an increased risk of hypoparathyroidism and recurrent laryngeal nerve injury following total thyroidectomy. In specialized centers, however, the occurrence of these complications is low and reported to be around 6% for hypoparathyroidism (usually manifesting with transient hypocalcemia) and less than 1% for recurrent laryngeal injury.
Patients with indeterminate cytology on FNAB should be followed up and surgery should be indicated only in patients with risk factors (neck irradiation, familial papillary thyroid cancer) or in case of nodule enlargement. In these situations, lobectomy plus isthmectom is recommended, whereas total thyroidectomy is indicated for those with suspicious or malignant thyroid carcinoma.
There may be some situations when total thyroidectomy might not be performed, due to the low adherence of the patient to the follow-up. These circumstances are very characteristics of some specific regions of Latin America and they could happen in patients who live far away from the hospital and who are probably supposed not to return for the follow-up. In situations like this, that are usually seen in the inner cities of some Latin American countries, it could be preferable to perform a lobectomy, considering that some of these patients are probably not taking levothyroxine and the quality of life might be seriously affected with the chronic hypothyroid state.
If a unifocal microcarcinoma (in a very low-risk patient, for example) is diagnosed after a lobectomy made due to a diagnosis of a benign thyroid disorder, the completion thyroidectomy may be avoided.
Regarding surgical treatment, the panel recommends total thyroidectomy when a prospective diagnosis of thyroid cancer is performed, whatever the tumor size is. Lobectomy might be an option when a retrospective diagnosis of a microcarcinoma is made or when the cultural characteristic of the diagnosed patient might interfere with the subsequent controls in the long-term follow-up.
Selective neck dissection for thyroid cancer
The procedure of choice for thyroid cancer is selective neck dissection (SND), most often indicated with or without dissection of other neck levels. This procedure refers to the removal of lymph nodes within the central compartment of the neck, including the paratracheal, precricoid (Delphian), and perithyroidal lymph nodes, as well as the nodes located along the recurrent laryngeal nerves. This procedure is also known as the anterior neck dissection or the central compartment neck dissection. In the presence of metastases extending below the level of the suprasternal notch, dissection of the superior mediastinal nodes may be indicated; in this case, the procedure is designated SND (level VII, superior mediastinal nodes). In case of thyroid cancer with evidence of lateral nodal metastases, the procedure of choice should include the jugular nodes as well as the posterior triangle nodes and would be designated SND (II-V, VI) (7).
Central compartment neck dissection should be routinely considered only for those patients with T3 or T4 (TNM status) and is not warranted in all patients.
However, routine evaluation of the paratracheal area is recommended during surgery, in order to check for any evidence of suspicious lymph nodes. If suspicion is raised about a paratracheal area lymph node, a frozen section may be obtained and appropriate paratracheal clearance is recommended based on the pathological finding. Paratracheal clearance should include removal of levels VI and VII lymph nodes, if clinically apparent. Level VI lymph nodes include paratracheal nodes, while level VII includes superior mediastinal nodes, which are more concerning in patients with obvious metastatic disease at level VI. If at the time of surgery there is obvious metastatic disease in the jugular chain or lateral neck, modified neck dissection with removal of the lymph nodes at levels II, III, IV, and V is generally recommended. Modified neck dissection for thyroid carcinoma preserves all the important structures, such as the sternomastoid muscle, internal jugular vein, and accessory nerve, along with the submandibular salivary gland (17,18).
Even though modified neck dissection is a reliable and safe surgical procedure for metastatic thyroid carcinoma, consideration must be given to certain complications, including high incidence of temporary and permanent hypoparathyroidism, recurrent laryngeal nerve injury, accessory nerve weakness leading to shoulder disability, chyle leak, bleeding and hematoma, Horner's syndrome, and injury to the brachial plexus or hypoglossal nerve (18). The consideration for neck dissection is evidently based on the surgeon experience in this procedure.
Patients undergoing neck dissection should be observed carefully in the postoperative period for serum calcium levels and symptoms of hypocalcemia, such as carpopedal spasm or tetany. These patients should be treated and maintained on calcium and vitamin D supplementation until serum calcium returns to normal levels, which may take up to two to three months.
At the time of surgery, if any portion of the parathyroid gland is identified as devascularized, parathyroid autotransplantation should be performed, preferably in the sternomastoid muscle or in the strap muscles. Prior to autotransplantation, it is important to reserve a small piece for frozen section analysis to confirm that the autotransplanted tissue is, in fact, a parathyroid gland, and not a lymph node or metastatic thyroid carcinoma.
SND is indicated in patients with diagnosed metastatic lymph nodes. The panel does not recommend the routine central neck dissection in all patients with diagnosis of papillary thyroid cancer; however, it is deserved for any patient with a T3 or T4 (TNM status).
Postoperative staging
The American Joint Committee on Cancer/International Union against Cancer (AJCC/UICC) TNM staging system (6th edition) should be used for assessment of patients with differentiated thyroid cancer on diagnosis and on every follow-up visit.
Risk stratification
The TNM system allows good stratification of the risk of death, but is weak in the prognostication of the recurrence risk (19). However, the following classification takes into consideration other variables that allow a reliable evaluation of the risk of disease persistence/recurrence.
Clinical and pathological risk stratification following initial treatment might be included in the following categories:
very low risk: patients with unifocal microcarcinoma and no extension beyond the thyroid capsule (T1 < 1 cm) and no local or distant metastases N0M0;
low risk: patients with uni- or multifocal tumors (T1 > 1 cm, multifocal T1 or T2), no local or distant metastases (N0M0), in which all macroscopic tumor has been eliminated, no tumor invasion of locoregional tissues or structures, no vascular invasion, no 131I uptake outside the thyroid bed on the first post-treatment whole body scanning (WBS) scan, and with non-aggressive histological features such as tall cell, insular and columnar cell carcinomas;
high risk: patients > 45 years of age with large tumors (T3 and T4) or any T with lymph node/regional metastases (N1), residual cancer after surgery (neck, distant sites, or both) or persistent disease, tumor extension beyond the thyroid capsule, distant metastases (M1) in any age, or aggressive tumor histology (for example, tall cell, columnar cell or insular types).
Postoperative radioiodine administration
Effective thyroid ablation with radioiodine requires adequate stimulation by TSH. Remnant ablation can be achieved with the same effectiveness either by administration of recombinant human TSH or by thyroid hormone withdrawal. Radioablation is performed after thyroidectomy to destroy normal thyroid tissue that may have been left behind and increase the sensibility and specificity of Tg measurement. Many studies have shown that patients who undergo post-surgical radioablation of thyroid remnants have decreased disease recurrence rates compared with those who do not receive ablation (20,21). Others, however, have concluded that, in low-risk patients, the incremental benefit of remnant ablation is unclear (22). Patients with papillary microcarcinoma receive ablation, especially when multicentricity, lymph node metastases and vascular or capsular invasion are encountered (23).
The panel recommends radioablation of thyroid remnants in all patients with high-risk thyroid cancer following total thyroidectomy. The procedure could be performed in low-risk patients and it is not mandatory in patients categorized as very low risk.
A low-iodine diet should be instituted 15 days before 131I therapy and continued for two days after that. A daily iodine intake of about 50 μg increases thyroidal 131I uptake and can potentially double the radiation per 100 mCi of 131I administered. The diet can be rather tedious, but an iodine intake limited to 50 μg a day can be achieved by restricting use of iodized salt, dairy products, eggs, and seafood (24). Although not routinely required, measurement of urinary iodine excretion may be useful in identifying patients in whom radioiodine should not be administered due to persistently high body iodine levels.
A diagnostic scan before radioiodine thyroid ablation is not usually indicated, but might be considered on special circumstances. For example, for assessment of the extent of the thyroidectomy in which large thyroid remnants may have remained and further surgery is required. It has been shown that diagnostic radioiodine doses may induce thyroid "stunning". This occurs most prominently with higher doses ( > 3 mCi) of 131I (25,26) and with increasing time between the diagnostic and the therapeutic 131I administration (26). Stunning is usually not visually appreciated with 123I or 131I doses below 3 mCi.
The usefulness of a pre-ablation radioiodine whole body scan is controversial.
Some of the members of the panel consider that a radioiodine dose around 100 μCi 131I could be administered only to perform a thyroid scintigraphy to show the extent of the surgery in selected cases, while others accept radioiodine doses up to 3 mCi 131I to make a whole body scan before ablation.
Radioablation of thyroid remnants after thyroid hormone withdrawal can be accomplished in most instances by a single 131I dose of 30 mCi, which delivers to the patient about 10 whole body rads (27,28).
A dose of 100 mCi 131I is more certain to provide ablation with a single administration than smaller doses, at the expense, however, of higher radiation exposure to the patient (29,30).
Radioiodine doses in the range of 90 to 100 mCi 131I are recommended when rhTSH is administered as an adjuvant before ablation (31,32). However, recent publications have shown that 50 mCi 131I is equally effective to 100 mCi 131I for thyroid remnant ablation following rhTSH, with no interruption in L-T4 administration (33,34). The use of rhTSH for ablation has shown to produce lesser exposure of radioiodine to the bone marrow and lowered toxicity related to the radioiodine dose than when administered after withdrawal (35,36). Short term recurrence of disease seems to be the same when a patient is prepared after thyroid hormone withdrawal than when performed after rhTSH (32).
In Latin America, the use of rhTSH has been approved as an adjuvant for thyroid remnant ablation in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, Peru and Uruguay.
A post-therapeutic (WB) should be performed within five to eight days after radioiodine ablation of thyroid remnants to detect additional uptaking foci, that may not have been detected with the diagnostic radioiodine dose (37).
The panel recommends the use of radioiodine doses higher than 30 mCi 131I when performed after withdrawal. If rhTSH is used, a radioiodine dose higher than 50 mCi 131I seems to be enough to destroy the thyroid remnants.
TSH-suppressive therapy
TSH-suppressive therapy is associated with increased survival (38).
In patients with low-risk thyroid cancer and without evidence of recurrence or metastases, serum TSH levels may be maintained between 0.4 and 1.0 mU/L. Patients with high risk should receive TSH suppression while they keep the high-risk status; aimed serum TSH values in these patients should be below 0.1 mU/L. If a high-risk patient is defined as free of disease, a decrease in L-T4 dose is recommended after three to five years of follow-up. In very low-risk patients, it is not necessary to suppress TSH levels. The thyroid hormone therapy can be administered in order to keep a TSH level into the normal range.
Contraindications for suppressive therapy are: atrial fibrillation, severe osteoporosis, and ischemic cardiovascular disease (39).
Immediate follow-up after surgery and radioiodine ablation
The first serum stimulated Tg determination after hypothyroidism post-surgery is a good prognosticator. An initial Tg value above 70 ng/mL has a positive predictive value of 90% for detection of metastases (40). Pre-ablative Tg levels have also been shown to be an independent prognostic indicator for disease-free remission by another study, in which levels above 27.5 ng/mL were associated with a positive predictive value of 98% (41). The ideal timing for serum Tg measurement is immediately before 131I administration, if patients undergo L-T4 withdrawal. The Tg measurement after rhTSH may not reflect only the thyroid cells stimulation, but also the thyroid cellular destruction, considering that it must be measured after the radioiodine dose administration (fifth day after the first injection).
Serum Tg should be measured with a sensitive immunometric assay (functional sensitivity < 1.0 ng/mL) standardized on the European reference standard (CRM 457). The emergence of new second generation Tg assays or molecular markers in the future might allow a more adequate follow-up of patients with residual thyroid tissue.
The presence of circulating thyroglobulin antibodies (Tg-Ab) may interfere with immunometric assays and yield falsely lower Tg determinations. Approximately 25% of the thyroid cancer patients and 10% of the general population have Tg-Ab, and their presence must be ruled out by direct measurement of Tg-Ab, instead of using the Tg recovery test. Serial serum Tg-Ab measurements may serve as an imprecise surrogate marker of residual normal thyroid tissue or tumor (42).
The panel recommends the assessment of serum Tg before ablation when it will be performed after thyroid hormone withdrawal. The moment when measuring serum Tg after ablation with rhTSH has not been addressed yet.
TSH-stimulated serum thyroglobulin and Tg-Ab measurement in short term follow-up
In very low-risk and non-ablated patients, the risk of persistent or recurrent disease is small by definition, and TSH-stimulated serum Tg and Tg-Ab measurement is usually not necessary. Follow-up with serum Tg and Tg-Ab determinations during L-T4 treatment combined with neck US every 6 to 12 months is recommended for these patients.
In patients with low-risk thyroid carcinoma, serum Tg and Tg-Ab measurement following L-T4 withdrawal or rhTSH administration should be performed around 12 months after surgery. At this point, WBS is not mandatory (43,44) (Figure 1).
A Tg cut-off level of 2 ng/mL after rhTSH stimulation is highly sensitive to identify patients with persistent tumor (45). Approximately 20% of patients who are clinically free of disease and have serum Tg levels below 1 ng/mL during L-T4 suppressive therapy will present levels above 2 ng/mL after rhTSH or thyroid hormone withdrawal (46); persistent tumor may be identified on imaging studies in about 1/3 of these patients. In patients with small cervical lymph node metastases or less differentiated tumors, serum non-stimulated Tg measurements have lower sensitivity (47). The clinical significance of minimally detectable Tg levels is still unclear, especially when an increase is only detected after TSH stimulation. In any case, a rising (non-stimulated or stimulated) serum Tg may indicate a disease likely to become clinically apparent (46,47).
It is noteworthy that results of serum Tg measurements performed on the same serum specimen differ among laboratories. Therefore, the Tg cut-off may differ slightly among medical centers and different laboratories. The frequency for subsequent stimulated testing is not clearly established for patients found to be free from the disease (47).
In patients with low-risk thyroid cancer, the panel recommends to measure a stimulated Tg level after one year of initial treatment. Diagnostic WBS is not necessary, at this point, in this group of patients.
Serum thyroglobulin and Tg-Ab measurement during L-T4 therapy
Measurement of serum Tg and Tg-Ab during TSH suppressive therapy should be performed between 6 to 12 months after surgery, based on each patient's risk.
Cervical US
Cervical US is highly sensitive in detecting cervical metastases in patients with differentiated thyroid cancer, especially when associated to a stimulated Tg level (48). It should be ideally performed at 6 and 12 months after surgery, and annually thereafter, depending on the patient's risk for recurrence and on Tg levels. Neck US is an operator-dependent procedure, and a learning curve may improve individual performance. This procedure is more sensitive than neck palpation, has the ability to detect lymph nodes as small as 2 to
3 mm in diameter, and may be used routinely for assessing lymph node chains as well as evaluating the thyroid bed. Benign lymph node hyperplasia is frequent and a distinction should be made between hyperplasia and metastatic disease. Important US criteria suggesting malignancy include cystic appearance, hyperechoic punctuations (microcalcifications), loss of hyperechoic hilum and peripheral vascularization (49).
For lymph nodes that present a short axis larger than 0.5 cm that persist over several months, the specificity of neck US may be improved by assessing the US characteristics of the lymph nodes and by performing US-FNAB for cytology and Tg measurement in the aspirate fluid. Lymph nodes with short axis equal or smaller than 0.5 cm should be carefully described and followed with periodical US monitoring.
US should be performed initially at 3 to 6 months after total thyroidectomy and, then, every 6 to 12 months, depending on the patient risk. If one low-risk or very low-risk patient is considered free from the disease after three to five years of follow-up, then, no more annual ultrasonographic control is needed.
Indications for other imaging modalities
WBS
An increase in TSH levels should be obtained before administration of 131I for diagnosis or therapeutic purpose. High TSH levels can be achieved after three to four weeks of thyroid hormone withdrawal. A TSH level higher than 30 mUI/mL is usually required (50,51). Another option is the administration of rhTSH (0.9 mg intramuscularly) for two consecutive days, followed by 131I on the third day. Serum Tg should be measured on the fifth day, when performed after rhTSH administration, and before radioiodine administration, when performed after withdrawal (43,45,52).
Following administration of 131I for ablation or therapy, WBS should be performed within five to seven days.
A practical approach for the follow-up of patients with differentiated thyroid cancer can be appreciated in figure 1.
Bone scintigraphy
The panel does not recommend routine bone scintigraphy.
Computed tomography
Recommendations for CT include suspicion of lung, mediastinal, CNS and bone metastases.
Magnetic resonance imaging
MRI is useful in the diagnosis of mediastinal and central nervous system metastases.
FDG-PET
FDG-PET is recommended for patients with detectable non-stimulated or stimulated serum Tg levels (above 10 ng/mL), but negative WBS, to help identifying metastatic lesions (53). Stimulation with endogenous TSH after L-T4 withdrawal or rhTSH (54) and CT fusion may enhance the sensitivity and specificity of FDG-PET scanning.
Management of patients with elevated Tg and negative imaging tests
Pulmonary metastases may occasionally be discovered on post-treatment WBS after administration of a large 131I dose (55). In one study, about 6% of 283 patients with high serum Tg levels treated with 100 mCi 131I had distant metastases detected on post-treatment WBS that were not detected on a 2 mCi pre-treatment scan (56).
The panel suggests that patients with negative imaging and increasing non-stimulated or stimulated Tg levels, higher than 10 ng/mL, might be treated with a higher radioiodine dose ( > 100 mCi 131I) to increase radioiodine uptake of eventual metastases. If no uptake is visible after high radioiodine dose, no additional radioiodine should be administered.
Low functional sensitivity Tg assays
Low functional sensitivity Tg assays have a higher sensitivity, but at the expense of a lower specificity (57,58). The future emergence of second generation Tg assays will probably reduce the need of TSH-stimulated Tg measurement in some patients (59).
The panel does not recommend the routine use of low functional sensitivity Tg assays until more evidence is published regarding its efficacy.
Management of patients with positive Tg-Ab
In patients with Tg-Ab positivity, undetectable serum Tg levels should not be interpreted as evidence of remission. These patients must be monitored with periodical neck US and diagnostic 131I WBS instead of serum Tg determinations. If there is suspicion of distant disease, patients should also undergo evaluation with other imaging techniques such as CT, MRI, or FDG-PET. The disappearance of Tg-Ab during follow-up may itself be considered evidence of remission in these patients.
Management of patients with recurrent or metastatic disease
Surgery
When local recurrences are detected, a complete ipsilateral dissection of the compartments with persistent/recurrent disease should be performed, sparing vital structures whenever possible (for example, modified levels II-V neck dissection sparing the spinal accessory nerve, the internal jugular vein, and the sternocleidomastoid muscle). Neck dissection of the VI and VII compartments should be carried out in case it was not performed during total thyroidectomy.
131 I therapy
Administration of fixed doses of 131I to patients with metastatic disease is a simpler, but sometimes not safer, approach compared with administration of calculated doses. The main disadvantage of fixed doses, however, is that some patients may receive insufficient 131I to adequately treat their tumors. However, the disadvantage with high fixed doses, especially in elderly people, can be the risk of exceeding the maximum tolerated radiation dose.
In general, lymph node metastases too small to be excised surgically should be treated with doses ranging from 150 to 175 mCi. Patients with cancer growth through the thyroid capsule should be managed with doses ranging from 150 to 200 mCi, and those with distant metastases with 200 to 300 mCi, which is unlikely to cause severe radiation sickness or serious damage to critical structures. Lung metastases are generally treated with doses between 200 to 250 mCi 131I. Again, this radioiodine doses can be deleterious, above all in the elderly. Caution is recommended when radioiodine doses are empirically administered in older patients.
131 I treatment of metastases after rhTSH
The panel recommends that thyroid hormone withdrawal precede the treatment of metastases with 131I. However, in elderly patients or in those with contraindication for thyroid hormone withdrawal, good results have been shown with 131I therapy preceded by rhTSH stimulation (60,61). The use of prophylactic glucocorticoids is recommended when therapeutic 131I is administered in patients with metastatic disease after rhTSH to prevent tumor enlargement (61,62).
The ideal approach for patients with metastatic lesions is real dosimetry. Recent studies using PET scans (with 124I) have shown that this approach allows calculation of both the volume of the metastatic lesions and the radioiodine uptake (63). Therapeutic options for patients with locally advanced disease not able to receive surgical treatment and/or distant metastases are rarely curative, but may be effective in reducing tumor size and improving quality of life.
Follow-up in patients with metastatic disease
In patients who develop metastatic disease that uptakes 131I, new doses of 131I should be administered until disease control, appearance of adverse events, or loss of radioiodine uptake.
Lung metastases
In case a single nodular metastasis is present in the lung, surgical excision is recommended, provided there is easy access. If multinodular or diffuse metastases are encountered, radioiodine should be the treatment of choice.
Bone metastases
Bone metastases should be treated with a combination of surgery when possible, administration of 131I, if uptake is present, and external beam radiotherapy either as a palliative treatment or to help control pain.
Brain metastases
Depending on the accessibility, surgery is recommended in this case, followed by radioiodine administration. Special care should be taken with occurrence of hemorrhagic stroke after radioiodine; in this case, glucocorticoids should be used preventively. If the tumor is unresectable and non-iodine avid, external beam radiotherapy should be considered to provide palliation. Glucocorticoids is recommended when therapeutic 131I is administered in patients with metastatic brain disease to prevent tumor enlargement due to swelling.
Use of lithium with 131I therapy
Lithium may be a useful adjuvant for 131I therapy of metastatic disease, increasing both the accumulation and the retention ofthe isotope in the lesion. Given at a dose of 300 mg (10 mg/kg) one to three times daily and starting about a week before 131I therapy, lithium increases uptake in metastatic lesions while only slightly increasing it in normal thyroid tissue. The drug enhances 131I retention probably as a result of its inhibitory effect on iodine release from both normal and neoplastic follicular cells (64).
Lithium maximizes the irradiation of tumors in which the biologic half-life of iodine is less than six days without increasing irradiation to other organs. The largest increase in tumor irradiation occurs in lesions with a biological half-life of less than three days. Retention of 131I during lithium therapy increases 50% in tumors and 90% in thyroid remnants, the net effect being more than a 2-fold average increase in the irradiation dose to metastatic tumor. Serum lithium levels should be measured daily and maintained between 0.8 and 1.2 nmol/L. The drug may be continued for five to seven days after therapy, and, since lithium levels cannot be measured immediately after 131I therapy, one must carefully avoid lithium toxicity during this time (64).
The panel considers that lithium might be used in selected cases to increase the effect of the radiodiodine in selected patients with metastatic disease.
External beam radiotherapy
External beam radiotherapy should be used as palliative therapy or for pain control. It may be recommended as initial treatment for recurrent or unresectable tumors, or for tumors with local invasion, presumed to have macro- or microscopic residual disease that do not concentrate 131I. External beam radiotherapy may also be indicated in patients with bone or brain metastases.
Other considerations
For patients with locally advanced disease, unresectable cancer and/or distant metastases in whom all therapeutic options have failed and disease progresses, there is the option of systemic chemotherapy with doxorubicin as a single agent or combined with cisplatin (65).
In general, the response rates are low, short lasting, and associated with a high degree of toxicity.
Targeted therapy in advanced thyroid cancer
Targeted therapies are generally cytostatic and not cytotoxic, which may pose a problem, since thyroid cancer requires life-long therapy. This may be satisfactory if the drug has low toxicity and is well tolerated. However, there is usually a high risk that ''resting'' neoplastic cells may develop compensatory pathways, often by acquiring other mutations leading to disease progression.
Gefitinib is a small molecule inhibitor of EGFR tyrosine kinase. Therapy with oral dose of 250 mg once daily achieves reduction in tumor volume. However, in a phase II study, it did not meet criteria for partial response rate in 32% of the patients and stabilization of the disease in 46%, 24%, and 12% of the patients after 3, 6, and 12 months of treatment, respectively (66).
Motesanib diphosphate (AMG 706) is a novel oral inhibitor of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptors. In a phase II trial in patients with advanced thyroid cancer, out of 93 patients with follicular cell-derived thyroid cancer treated with 125 mg of motesanib diphosphate, 14% experienced a complete or partial response and 67% had stable disease (67).
Sorafenib is a kinase inhibitor, including Raf kinase, VEGF receptor, platelet-derived growth factor receptor and RET tyrosine kinases. In a phase II trial in 30 patients with advanced thyroid cancer, partial remission was achieved in 7 (23%) and stable disease in 16 (53%) patients (68).
Others kinase inhibitors that have been used in phase II clinical trials with partial response or stable disease include axitinib (VEGFR) and sunitinib (RET, VEGFR and PDGFR) (69).
Thalidomide is an antiangiogenic agent and has been used for therapy of radioiodine-unresponsive and rapidly progressive thyroid carcinomas with partial response in 18% and stable disease in 32% of the patients. Daily dose starts at 200 mg and is increased over six weeks to 800 mg or to the maximum tolerated dose (70). The kinase inhibitors and other agents that target vascularity appear to have activity in thyroid cancer that results in partial remission in some patients and stable disease in a large group of patients (approximately 50%). These agents appear unlikely to cure patients with progressive metastatic disease. Also, treatment-related adverse events are common with these drugs and can reduce quality of life. Potentially severe side effects include diarrhea, hypertension, fatigue, weight loss, and hand-foot syndrome.
The panel recommends considering the enrolling of patients with no other therapeutic option in any clinical trials available.
Thyroid cancer in children
It should be noted that children usually have larger tumors and a higher incidence of lymph node metastases at presentation. According to the large series from the Cancer Registry of England and Wales the proportion of childhood thyroid cancer was: papillary carcinoma (68%), follicular carcinoma (11%), medullary carcinoma (17%) and others (4%). Cervical lymph node involvement was present in the majority of children affected with thyroid cancer (71).
Most authors recommend total or near-total thyroidectomy followed by ablation with 131I and thyroid hormone suppressive therapy in children with differentiated thyroid carcinoma. When metastases are present, selective lymph node dissection is indicated.
Although rhTSH is not approved to be used in this setting, in Latin America we had one of the first experiences of its use (72).
Differentiated thyroid cancer during pregnancy
Pregnant women who are diagnosed with thyroid cancer share similar physical findings, pathological tumor features and outcome as those who were not pregnant (73). Treatment in this group of patients is also similar to that in non-pregnant women. In case of differentiated thyroid cancer, the prognosis among pregnant and non-pregnant women of the same age is equal. The use of 131I for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes after delivery is safe, providing the patient is not breastfeeding.
The panel recommends that the diagnosis and treatment of thyroid cancer that occurs during pregnancy be delayed until after delivery in most patients.
Acknowledgments: We gratefully acknowledge the contributions of Cristiane Almeida, Denise Wittmann, Geraldo Medeiros-Neto, Hector Perinetti, Liliana Bergoglio, Luiz Kowalski, Marcos Tavares, Marilia Marone, Milena Braga-Basaria, Nilton Hanaoka, Nilton Herter, Rui Maciel, Sergio Toledo, and Suemi Marui.
Disclosure: Sandro Corigliano works as Clinical Investigator for Takeda, GlaxoSmithKline, Merck Sharp Dohme, and Novartis; as Advisory Board for Sanofi-Aventis, and Merck Sharp Dohme; and as Local Speaker for GlaxoSmithKline, Merck Sharp Dohme, Sanofi-Aventis, and Abbott. Fabian Pitoia works as a consultant and speaker bureau for Genzyme Corp. The others authors have no competing financial interests.
Received in Apr/13/2009
Accepted in Aug/11/2009
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Publication Dates
-
Publication in this collection
18 Nov 2009 -
Date of issue
Oct 2009
History
-
Accepted
11 Aug 2009 -
Received
13 Apr 2009