Eur J Endocrinol
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DOI: 10.1530/EJE-07-0603
European Journal of Endocrinology, Vol 158, Issue 4, 551-560
Copyright © 2008 by European Society of Endocrinology
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CLINICAL STUDIES

Macroscopic lymph-node involvement and neck dissection predict lymph-node recurrence in papillary thyroid carcinoma.

Stéphane Bardet, Elodie Malville1, Jean-Pierre Rame2, Emmanuel Babin3, Guy Samama4, Dominique De Raucourt2, Jean-Jacques Michels5, Yves Reznik1 and Michel Henry-Amar6

Department of Nuclear Medicine and Thyroid Unit, Centre François Baclesse, 3 Avenue Général Harris, BP 5026, F-14076 Caen Cedex 05, France1 Department of Endocrinology, University Hospital, Caen, France2 Department of Head and Neck Surgery, Centre François Baclesse, Caen, France, Departments of3 Head and Neck Surgery4 General Surgery, University Hospital, Caen, France5 Department of Pathology6 Clinical Research Unit, Centre François Baclesse, Caen, France

(Correspondence should be addressed to S Bardet; Email: s.bardet{at}baclesse.fr)

Objective: Whether lymph-node dissection (LND) influences the lymph-node recurrence (LNR) risk in patients with papillary thyroid cancer remains controversial. The prognostic impact of macroscopic and microscopic lymph-node involvement at diagnosis is also an unresolved issue. A retrospective study was conducted to assess the influence of various LND procedures and to search for LNR risk factors.

Methods: Overall 545 patients without distant metastases prior to surgery and main tumour ≥10 mm were included. A total thyroidectomy was performed in all patients with either no LND (Group 1, n=161), bilateral LND of the central and lateral compartments (Group 2, n=181) or all other dissection modalities (Group 3, n=203). Post-operative radioiodine was given to 496 (91%) patients. The 10-year cumulative probability of LNR was assessed and a prognostic study using multivariate analysis was performed.

Results: Macroscopic lymph-node metastases were present in 118 patients, 57 diagnosed before surgery and 61 only at surgery (including 81% in the central compartment). Overall, the 10-year cumulative probability of LNR was 7%. Macroscopic lymph-node metastases (P=0.001), extra-thyroidal invasion (P=0.017) and male gender (P=0.05) were independent risk factors, while bilateral LND of the central and lateral compartments was protective (P=0.028). In patients with macroscopic lymph-node metastases, the 10-year probability was lower in Group 2 than in Group 3 (10% vs 30%, P<0.01). In patients without macroscopic lymph-node metastases (n=427), no significant differences were observed between the three LND groups.

Conclusions: Patients with macroscopic, but not microscopic, lymph-node involvement have a major LNR risk and need an optimal LND at primary surgery.







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