Clinical Oncology
Volume 22, Issue 6 , Pages 419-429, August 2010

Contemporary Post Surgical Management of Differentiated Thyroid Carcinoma

  • H. Tala
  • ,
  • R.M. Tuttle

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationAuthor for correspondence: R. Michael Tuttle, Endocrinology Service, Department of Medicine, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, Zuckerman Building, Room 834, 1275 York Avenue, New York, NY 10021, USA. Tel: +646-888-2716; Fax: +646-888-2700.

Endocrinology Service, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, USA

Received 18 February 2010; accepted 23 April 2010. published online 02 June 2010.

Abstract 

Risk assessment is the cornerstone of contemporary management of thyroid cancer. Following thyroid surgery, an initial risk assessment of recurrence and disease-specific mortality is made using important intra-operative findings, histologic characteristics of the tumor, molecular profile of the tumor, post-operative serum thyroglobulin and any available cross-sectional imaging studies. This initial risk assessment is used to guide recommendations regarding the need for remnant ablation, external beam irradiation, systemic therapy, degree of TSH suppression, and follow-up disease detection strategy over the first 2 years after initial therapy.

While this initial risk stratification provides valuable information, it is a static representation of the patient in the first few weeks post-operatively that does not change over time. Depending on how the patient responds to our initial therapies, the risk of recurrence and death may change significantly during follow-up. In order to account for differences in response to therapy in individual patients and to incorporate the impact of treatment on our initial risk estimates, we recommend a re-stratification of risk at the 2-year point of follow-up. This re-stratification provides an updated risk estimate that can be used to guide ongoing management recommendations including the frequency and intensity of follow-up, degree of ongoing TSH suppression, and need for additional therapies.

Ongoing management recommendations must be tailored to realistic, evolving risk estimates that are actively updated during follow-up. By individualizing therapy on the basis of initial and ongoing risk assessments, we can maximize the beneficial effects of aggressive therapy in patients with thyroid cancer who are likely to benefit from it, while minimizing potential complications and side effects in low-risk patients destined to have a full healthy and productive life after minimal therapeutic intervention.

Key words: Follow-up, risk-adapted management, thyroid cancer

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PII: S0936-6555(10)00163-9

doi:10.1016/j.clon.2010.04.005

Clinical Oncology
Volume 22, Issue 6 , Pages 419-429, August 2010