Abstract

There are still many questions remaining about the etiopathogenesis of thyroid cancer, the most common type of endocrine neoplasia. Numerous occupational and environmental exposures have been shown to represent important risk factors that increase its incidence. Updated information about thyroid cancer diagnostics related to occupational and environmental risk factors is reviewed here, considering an integrated risk assessment approach; new data concerning thyroid cancer etiology and pathogenesis mechanisms, diagnostic biomarkers and methodologies, and risk factors involved in its pathogenesis are presented. A special emphasis is dedicated to specific occupational risk factors and to the association between environmental risk agents and thyroid cancer development. The occupational environment is taken into consideration, i.e., the current workplace and previous jobs, as well as data regarding risk factors, e.g., age, gender, family history, lifestyle, use of chemicals, or radiation exposure outside the workplace. Finally, an integrative approach is presented, underlying the need for an accurate Risk Assessment Matrix based on a systematic questionnaire. We propose a complex experimental design that contains different inclusion and exclusion criteria for patient groups, detailed working protocols for achieving coherent and sustainable, well-defined research stages from sample collection to the identification of biomarkers, with correlations between specific oncometabolites integrated into the Risk Assessment Matrix.

Highlights

  • Cancer is a global challenge that has a significant impact on human mortality and morbidity, as well as an increasing incidence worldwide

  • A systematic search of MEDLINE and Web of Science databases, with 31 studies investigating metabolite biomarkers of thyroid cancer (TC), was performed in a recent review which showed specific metabolite alterations within the plasma, fine needle aspiration (FNA) specimens, and tissue of TC vs. benign samples in healthy subjects [43]. Another complex study on the applications of metabolomics in TC research highlighted the most important steps required for untargeted and targeted analysis using specific LC–MS techniques [29,34]

  • Thyroid illnesses may have an impact on many occupational outcomes, according to a recent study [52], but further research is needed to understand the association between specific pathological characteristics throughout time and workplace risk factors

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Summary

Introduction

Cancer is a global challenge that has a significant impact on human mortality and morbidity, as well as an increasing incidence worldwide. Numerous occupational and environmental exposures have been shown to represent important risk factors that increase the incidence of thyroid cancer (TC). TC, the most common type of endocrine neoplasia, is still among those with the least amount of information available concerning the etiopathogenesis of all its cancerous forms. Numerous occupational and environmental exposures have been shown to disrupt endocrine function, but much less is known about their relationship with TC [1]. The number of new cases is constantly increasing, with TC ranking ninth in the top types of cancer mentioned by Globocan 2020 [2]; retrospective and prospective studies are welcome

Etiology and Pathogenesis Mechanisms
Thyroid Cancer Diagnostics
Occupational Risk Factors
Environmental Risk Factors
Risk Factors and Risk Assessments
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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