Abstract
Lymph node metastases (LNM) are frequent in patients with papillary thyroid cancer (PTC). The risk of persistent disease (PD) and tumor recurrence (TR) is increased when factors for poor prognosis other than LNM exist, when LNM are numerous, large, detected by preoperative ultrasonography (US), or exhibit extranodal extension. This study evaluated the risk of PD and TR in patients with LNM not exhibiting these characteristics. Eighty-six patients with 5 or fewer LNM detected during intraoperative inspection, but not by preoperative US, who had no other factors for poor prognosis [tumors > 4 cm, extensive extrathyroid invasion, vascular invasion, aggressive histological subtype, distant metastases, incomplete tumor resection], were studied. All patients underwent total thyroidectomy followed by radioiodine ablation. PD was defined as metastases on initial post-therapy whole-body scans (RxWBS) or detected by imaging methods up to 12 months after ablation. TR was defined as structural disease diagnosed more than one year after ablation in patients without PD. PD was diagnosed in 3/86 patients (3.5%). TR was observed in 2/83 patients (2.5%) after 62 months of follow-up. There was no case of death due to the disease. A correlation was observed between pre-ablation Tg and PD or TR [1/48 (2%) with Tg ≤ 2 ng/mL versus 2/22 (9%) with Tg > 2 ≤ 10 ng/mL versus 2/7 (28.5%) with Tg ≥ 10 ng/ml)]. It is noteworthy that 38 patients had up to 3 positive LN and pre-ablation Tg ≤ 2 ng/ml, and none of them had PD or TR. The frequency of PD and TR was low in patients with PTC with 5 or fewer LNM and without other factors for poor prognosis. Low postoperative stimulated Tg was predictive of the absence of PD and TR in these patients.
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