Abstract
We evaluated the risk of bilateral or contralateral cervical lymph node metastases in 135 patients with papillary thyroid cancer who underwent bilateral neck dissection. We confirmed that bilateral jugular lymph node metastases were frequent in patients with obvious carcinoma in both lobes of the gland, in those with cancers arising in the isthmus, in those with clinically detectable bilateral lymphadenopathy, and in those with recurrent thyroid cancer. However, only 24% of the patients who had cancer clinically confined to one lobe with no bilateral or contralateral lymphadenopathy had histologically detected bilateral or contralateral jugular lymph node metastases. But the occurrence of contralateral jugular lymph node metastases was significantly correlated with both clinical lymphadenopathy in the ipsilateral neck and contralateral paratracheal lymph node metastases. Bilateral lymph dissection might be beneficial for these patients.
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