Abstract

BACKGROUNDWith increasing incidence of thyroid carcinoma, the optimal management of central lymph nodes remains an unanswered question although central neck nodes represent the most common site of recurrence. The aim of this study was to determine the morbidity of prophylactic central neck dissection in differentiated thyroid cancer and to evaluate histopathological correlation between nodal metastases and histological features. METHODThis was a prospective, observational study of 2 years duration (May 2017 to May 2019) involving 30 patients with proven differentiated thyroid cancers and clinicoradiologically negative lymph node with no history of neck surgeries. They all underwent total thyroidectomy with bilateral central neck dissection. Surgical outcomes in the form of transient or permanent hypoparathyroidism, transient and permanent recurrent nerve palsy were assessed along with histopathological correlation of primary tumor with central node positivity. DISCUSSIONClassical histology (p = 0.05), >4 cm tumor size (p = 0.04), lymphovascular invasion (p = 0.04) and multifocality (p = 0.04) were all significantly associated with increased risk of central lymph nodal metastasis. The incidence of transient and permanent hypoparathyroidism was 36.3% and 10% respectively. Metastatic lymph node ratio of >60% is significantly associated with increased preablative serum thyroglobulin levels. Around 35% of the pT1 or T2 lesions were upstaged for postoperative radioiodine ablation CONCLUSIONAn important role of prophylactic central neck dissection may lie in male patients, age > 45years, tumor size >4 cm, extrathyroidal extension, lymphovascular invasion and multifocality in accurate staging and can be performed with minimal morbidity at a high volume center.

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