BackgroundThe absence of primary tumor desmoplasia, a marker of node metastases, on frozen section may help reduce the extent of surgery without compromising the biochemical cure. We aimed to clarify whether hemithyroidectomy with diagnostic ipsilateral central neck dissection can replace total thyroidectomy with routine central neck dissection in patients with sporadic medullary thyroid cancer. MethodsWe retrospectively evaluated data collected from patients who had undergone primary neck surgery for hypercalcitoninemic sporadic medullary thyroid cancer between January 2017 and December 2022 at one institution. ResultsOf the 25 patients we examined, 19 had desmoplasia-negative and 6 desmoplasia-positive primary thyroid tumors on frozen section. The desmoplasia-negative patients had undergone less surgery with fewer nodes removed than the desmoplasia-positive patients (medians of 6 vs 31 nodes, P < .001). The desmoplasia-negative patients had predominantly undergone hemithyroidectomy with ipsilateral central neck dissection. None of the desmoplasia-negative tumors was multifocal (0 of 19 desmoplasia-negative vs 2 of 6 desmoplasia-positive or 0% vs 33%, P = .050) or node-positive (0 of 19 vs 6 of 6 patients or 0% vs 100%; medians of 0 vs 3.5 node metastases; both P < .001). Despite limited surgery, all desmoplasia-negative patients attained and maintained biochemical cure. ConclusionHemithyroidectomy combined with diagnostic ipsilateral central neck dissection is a viable risk-reducing and curative strategy for desmoplasia-negative and node-negative, nonmetastatic unifocal tumors, for which we propose the term sporadic noninvasive medullary thyroid neoplasm (SNMTP).
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