Research Paper
Does the method of management of papillary thyroid carcinoma make a difference in outcome?
Journal
World Journal of Surgery
Publisher
Springer New York
ISSN
0364-2313 (Print) 1432-2323 (Online)

Issue
Volume 18, Number 1 / January, 1994
Category
Original Scientific Reports
DOI
10.1007/BF00348202
Pages123-130

Subject Collection
Medicine
SpringerLink Date
Saturday, December 11, 2004

Leslie J. DeGroot, Edwin L. Kaplan, Francis H. Straus and Manan S. Shukla

Address
Thyroid Study Unit/Mail Code 3090,
The University of Chicago,
5841 South Maryland Avenue,
60637 Chicago,
Illinois,
USA

Abstract:
We have analyzed data on a group of 269 patients with papillary thyroid carcinoma followed on average for 12 years to determine (1) if a prognostic classification scheme can be used to predict an appropriate surgical approach; (2) the effect of treatment on prognosis; and (3) if patients with a excellent prognosis benefit from more extensive surgical resection and 131I ablation. Prognostic classification schemes developed by the American Joint Commission, Cady et al., Hay et al., the European Thyroid Association, and our own clinical class scheme each appropriately divided patients into risk category groups. With each system, some patients classified in the low risk group eventually died of the tumor. Considering the excellent but not perfect precision of the prognostic schemes, the need for detailed pathologic analysis, and ideally postoperative thyroid scanning, we conclude that the prognostic classification schemes do not allow the decision at the operating table regarding the appropriate extent of surgery. Patients followed at our institution, operated on by one of three experienced surgeons, and usually given 131I ablation were compared to other patients in the follow-up group operated on by other surgeons and not routinely ablated. There were significantly fewer deaths and recurrences among the patients managed by our method. However, when the groups were restricted to those considering only patients who had more extensive surgery, postoperative 131I ablation, or both, the differences between the groups became insignificant. This finding indicates that the difference in prognosis, comparing patients treated at our institution and those initially treated elsewhere, was
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