From the Journals

‘Game changer’: Thyroid cancer recurrence no higher with lobectomy


 

FROM JAMA SURGERY

With total thyroidectomy, RAI can be given

An important argument in favor of total thyroidectomy is that with the complete resection of thyroid tissue, RAI ablation can then be used for postoperative detection of residual or metastatic disease, as well as for treatment, the authors note.

Indeed, a study using the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database showed RAI ablation is associated with a 29% reduction in the risk of death in patients with intermediate-risk papillary thyroid cancer, with a hazard risk of 0.71.

However, conflicting data from Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, suggests no significant benefit with total thyroidectomy and RAI ablation.

The current study’s analysis of patients treated with RAI, though limited in size, supports the latter study’s findings, the authors note.

“When we performed further stratified analyses in patients treated with total thyroidectomy plus RAI ablation and their counterparts, no significant difference was found, which conformed with [the] result from the whole cohort.”

“Certainly, the stratified comparison did not have enough power to examine the effect of RAI ablation on tumor recurrence subject to the limitation of sample size and case selection [and] further study is needed on this topic,” they write.

Some limitations warrant cautious interpretation

In their editorial, Dr. Mulder and Dr. Duh note that while some previous studies have shown similar outcomes relating to tumor size, thyroid hormone suppression therapy, and multifocality, “few have addressed lateral neck involvement.”

They suggest cautious interpretation, however, due to limitations, acknowledged by the authors, including the single-center nature of the study.

“Appropriate propensity matching may mitigate selection bias but cannot eliminate it entirely and their findings may not be replicated in other institutions by other surgeons,” they note.

Other limitations include that changes in clinical practice and patient selection were likely over the course of the study because of significant changes in American Thyroid Association (ATA) guidelines between 2009 and 2017, and characteristics including molecular genetic testing, which could have influenced final results, were not taken into consideration.

Furthermore, for patients with intermediate-risk cancer, modifications in postoperative follow-up are necessary following lobectomy versus total thyroidectomy; “the role of radioiodine is limited and the levels of thyroglobulin more complicated to interpret,” they note.

The study and editorial authors had no disclosures to report.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Surgery shows no survival, morbidity benefit for mild hyperparathyroidism
MDedge Internal Medicine
Undertreated hypothyroidism may worsen hospital outcomes
MDedge Internal Medicine
Keeping thyroid hormone treatment on target is key for the heart
MDedge Internal Medicine
Hypothyroidism: No more waiting to eat or drink with liquid thyroxine?
MDedge Internal Medicine
Hyperthyroidism rebound in pregnancy boosts adverse outcomes
MDedge Internal Medicine
Thyroid autoimmunity linked to cancer, but screening not advised
MDedge Internal Medicine
Don’t be afraid of weight gain with hyperthyroid treatment
MDedge Internal Medicine
Stopping levothyroxine in subclinical hypothyroidism safe, feasible
MDedge Internal Medicine
USPSTF holds firm on postmenopausal hormone recommendations
MDedge Internal Medicine
Thyroid nodule volume reduction correlates with energy in ablation
MDedge Internal Medicine