Abstract

The incidence of differentiated thyroid cancer is increasing worldwide across all age groups. While most patients with differentiated thyroid cancer have a good prognosis, aggressive disease is more common in the elderly and disease-specific mortality is higher. Treatment options for differentiated thyroid cancer include surgery, levothyroxine, radioactive iodine, external beam radiotherapy and kinase inhibitors. Rational and evidence-based management is particularly important in older individuals because they may experience greater toxicities from the therapeutic options. We advocate an explicit risk-benefit analytic approach to thyroid cancer care that emphasises individual patient factors, likely disease biology and progression, and age-dependent treatment characteristics to ensure optimal treatment. In particular, this risk-benefit approach should seek to identify patients with aggressive disease, and, within a multidisciplinary setting, balance the likelihood of treatment success with the probability of treatment-related adverse effects.

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