4.2 Article

Axillary Node Metastases of Medullary Thyroid Cancer: A Hallmark of Terminal Disease

Journal

HORMONE AND METABOLIC RESEARCH
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

GEORG THIEME VERLAG KG
DOI: 10.1055/a-2172-9263

Keywords

medullary thyroid carcinoma; distant metastasis; neck node metastases; mediastinal node metastases; axillary node metastases

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Little is known about axillary node metastasis of medullary thyroid cancer (MTC). This study compared patients with and without axillary node metastases of MTC and found that patients with axillary node metastases had more node metastases, were more likely to develop distant metastases (especially to bone and brain), and had a higher cancer-specific death rate. Additionally, patients with axillary node metastases of MTC also had more lymph node metastases in the ipsilateral lateral and central neck. The cancer-specific survival of patients with axillary node metastases was significantly shorter compared to patients without axillary node metastases.
Little is known about axillary node metastasis of medullary thyroid cancer (MTC). To address this, a comparative study of patients with and without axillary node metastases of MTC was conducted. Among 1215 consecutive patients with MTC, 482 patients had node-negative MTC and 733 patients node-positive MTC. Among the 733 patients with node-positive MTC, 4 patients (0.5%) had axillary node metastases, all of which were ipsilateral. Patients with axillary node metastases had 5.7-6.9-fold more node metastases removed, both at the authors' institution (medians of 34.5 vs. 5 metastases; p=0.011) and in total (medians of 57 vs. 10 metastases; p=0.013), developed more frequently distant metastases (3 of 4 vs. 178 of 729 patients, or 75 vs. 24%; p=0.049), specifically to bone (2 of 4 vs. 67 of 729 patients, or 50 vs. 9%; p=0.046) and brain (1 of 4 vs. 4 of 729 patients, or 25 vs. 0.5%; p=0.027), and more often succumbed to cancer-specific death (3 of 4 vs. 52 of 729 patients, or 75 vs. 14%; p=0.005). Altogether, patients with axillary node metastases revealed 4-8-fold more node metastases in the ipsilateral lateral neck (medians of 11 vs. 3 metastases; p=0.021) and in the ipsilateral central neck (medians of 8 vs. 1 metastases; p=0.079) patients without axillary node metastases. Cancer-specific survival of patients with vs. patients without axillary node metastases of MTC was significantly shorter (means of 41 vs. 224 months; plog-rank<0.001). These findings show that patients with axillary node metastases of MTC have massive metastatic dissemination with poor survival.

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