Andreas Machens, Kerstin Lorenz, Frank Weber, Henning Dralle
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Purpose: No genomic data have been put forth that prove beyond a shadow of doubt that sporadic medullary thyroid cancer (MTC) occurs in infancy, childhood, and/or adolescence.
Methods: This was a retrospective comparative study of consecutive patients with MTC who had neck surgery at a tertiary center over a 30-year period.
Results: Included were 1252 patients with MTC (337 hereditary and 915 sporadic), of whom 107 (8.5%) were operated before the age of 18 yrs. Only 4 (3.7%) of the 107 pediatric patients, aged 14, 16, 17 and 17 years, had sporadic MTC. These 4 patients, 3 of whom had been referred for completion surgery, revealed much larger thyroid tumors (medians of 20 mm vs. 1.5-5 mm) than the 103 pediatric patients with hereditary MTC. As for extrathyroid extension and nodal metastases, the 4 patients with sporadic MTC were more comparable to the 37 carriers of highest-risk mutations, 31 (84%) of whom were index patients with de novo disease, than to the 66 carriers of high-risk, intermediate-risk, or low-risk RET mutations (25-38% vs. 0-8%, and medians of 9-9.5 vs. 0 node metastases after dissection of more (medians of 72-91.5 vs. 4.5-9) nodes).
Conclusion: Sporadic MTC, arising rarely, if ever, below the age of 14 years, is exceptional in infancy and childhood, and infrequent in adolescence. At diagnosis, it is almost as widely metastatic as hereditary MTC of the highest-risk category which almost always, like sporadic MTC, presents as de novo disease.
期刊介绍:
Well-established as a major journal in today’s rapidly advancing experimental and clinical research areas, Endocrine publishes original articles devoted to basic (including molecular, cellular and physiological studies), translational and clinical research in all the different fields of endocrinology and metabolism. Articles will be accepted based on peer-reviews, priority, and editorial decision. Invited reviews, mini-reviews and viewpoints on relevant pathophysiological and clinical topics, as well as Editorials on articles appearing in the Journal, are published. Unsolicited Editorials will be evaluated by the editorial team. Outcomes of scientific meetings, as well as guidelines and position statements, may be submitted. The Journal also considers special feature articles in the field of endocrine genetics and epigenetics, as well as articles devoted to novel methods and techniques in endocrinology.
Endocrine covers controversial, clinical endocrine issues. Meta-analyses on endocrine and metabolic topics are also accepted. Descriptions of single clinical cases and/or small patients studies are not published unless of exceptional interest. However, reports of novel imaging studies and endocrine side effects in single patients may be considered. Research letters and letters to the editor related or unrelated to recently published articles can be submitted.
Endocrine covers leading topics in endocrinology such as neuroendocrinology, pituitary and hypothalamic peptides, thyroid physiological and clinical aspects, bone and mineral metabolism and osteoporosis, obesity, lipid and energy metabolism and food intake control, insulin, Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes, hormones of male and female reproduction, adrenal diseases pediatric and geriatric endocrinology, endocrine hypertension and endocrine oncology.