Background
Subtotal thyroidectomy or lobectomy without radioactive iodide (131I) treatment is sufficient for postoperative treatment of incidental papillary thyroid microcarcinoma (PTMC). Aggressive surgical
treatment with 131I therapy is indicated for nonincidental PTMC.
Methods
This is a retrospective analysis of 335 PTMC patients who received primary thyroid surgical treatment and long-term follow-up
in a single medical center. All PTMC patients were categorized as incidental (group I) or nonincidental (group II). Group
II patients (209 cases) were categorized as intrathyroid (group II A), neck lymph node or local regional soft-tissue invasion
(group II B) and distant metastasis (group II C) groups.
Results
In group I, 105 of 126 cases received only subtotal thyroidectomy or lobectomy. None died of thyroid cancer. Histological
evaluation revealed multicentric PTMC in 12 (9.5%) and 52 (24.9%) cases (P < 0.05) in groups I and II, respectively. In group II, 55 of the 209 patients (26.3%) presented with extrathyroidal involvement.
Two cases of relapse occurred in group I and 20 in group II by the end of follow-up. One patient in group II B and two patients
in group II C died of thyroid cancer. Nine out of ten patients in group II C were diagnosed with distant metastases before
primary thyroid surgical treatment.
Conclusion
Subtotal thyroidectomy is effective surgical treatment for incidental PTMC. For nonincidental cases, aggressive treatment
is essential for reducing the risk of cancer relapse or mortality following surgery.
Keywords Nearly total thyroidectomy - Thyroglobulin - Multicentric -
131I treatment - Follicular variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma