4.6 Article

A Comparative Follow-Up Study of Patients with Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma Associated or Not with Graves' Disease

Journal

DIAGNOSTICS
Volume 12, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics12112801

Keywords

Graves' disease; papillary thyroid carcinoma; aggressive carcinoma; risk factors; follow-up; neck lymph node; distant metastasis; 131I SPECT; CT; thyroglobulin

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The study revealed that papillary carcinoma patients with Graves' disease exhibited more aggressive behavior during follow-up, especially those without risk factors. Furthermore, Graves' disease was identified as a potential predictive factor for tumor aggressiveness in cases without risk factors at diagnosis.
Whether papillary carcinoma (PC) behavior is more aggressive in Graves' disease (GD) patients than PC cases without GD is controversial. We retrospectively enrolled 33 thyroidectomized PC/GD patients during long-term follow-up, 23/33 without risk factors at surgery, and 18/33 microcarcinomas; 312 PC euthyroid-matched patients without risk factors served as controls. A total of 14/33 (42.4%) PC/GD patients, 4 with and 10 without risk factors at diagnosis, 6 with microcarcinoma, underwent metastases during follow-up. In controls, metastases in 21/312 (6.7%) were ascertained. Considering 10/23 PC/GD patients and 21/312 controls without risk factors who developed metastases, univariate analysis showed that there was an increased risk of metastasis appearance for PC/GD cases (p < 0.001). Disease-free survival (DFS) was significantly (p < 0.0001, log-rank test) shorter in PC/GD patients than in controls. Significantly more elevated aggressiveness in 6/18 PC/GD patients with microcarcinoma than in controls was also ascertained with shorter DFS. Thus, in the present study, PC/GD had aggressive behavior during follow-up also when carcinoma characteristics were favorable and some cases were microcarcinomas. GD and non-GD patient comparison in the cases without risk factors at diagnosis showed an increased risk to develop metastases in GD during follow-up, suggesting that GD alone might be a tumor aggressiveness predictive factor in these cases.

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