Abstract

Differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) is the most frequent endocrine malignancy and represents the most rapidly increasing cancer diagnosis worldwide. In the last 20 years, this increase has been mostly due to a higher detection of small papillary thyroid cancers, with doubtful effects on patients' outcome. In fact, despite this growth, cancer-related death remained stable over the years. The growing detection of microcarcinomas associated to the indolent behavior of these cancers led to the development of strategies of active surveillance in selected centers of different countries. Moreover, toward a more personalized approach in the management of DTC patients, surgical treatments became more conservative, favoring less extensive options in patients at low risk of recurrence. The rise in lobectomy in low-risk cases and the need to avoid further therapies, with controversial impact on recurrences and cancer-related death in selected intermediate risk cases, led to reconsider the use of radioiodine treatment, too. Since clinicians aim to treat different patients with different modalities, the cornerstone of DTC follow-up (i.e., thyroglobulin, thyroglobulin autoantibodies, and neck ultrasound) should be interpreted consistently with this change of paradigm. The introduction of novel molecular target therapies (i.e., tyrosine kinase inhibitors), as well as a better understanding of the mechanisms of immune checkpoint inhibitor therapies, is radically changing the management of patients with advanced DTC, in whom no treatment option was available. The aim of this review is to analyze the most recent developments of the management of DTC, focusing on several key issues: active surveillance strategies, initial treatment, dynamic risk re-stratification, and therapeutic options in advanced DTC.

Highlights

  • The recent advances in knowledge about differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) showed the need of a personalized management approach

  • Active surveillance has been proposed as an alternative to immediate surgery to avoid overtreatment in unifocal intrathyroidal papillary microcarcinoma, without metastatic lymph nodes or aggressive cytological features [1]

  • It was observed that mPTC changes in volume during time, rather than in maximum diameter, represent a more sensitive tool to select those patients who could benefit from a more careful monitoring or surgical treatment

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

The recent advances in knowledge about differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) showed the need of a personalized management approach. Despite the increased diagnosis of DTC, in particular small papillary thyroid cancers, cancer-related death remained stable over time. The clinical challenge is moving toward the identification of patients with indolent tumors, who can be treated and followed with a more conservative approach, as opposed to those in which aggressive therapy and intensive follow-up should be recommended. This paper discusses the key points of DTC management, from active surveillance to advanced therapy

ACTIVE SURVEILLANCE
INITIAL TREATMENT
DYNAMIC RISK RESTRATIFICATION
After Lobectomy
After TTx With or Without RAI
ADVANCED THERAPY
Systemic treatments
Findings
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call