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Thyroid microcarcinoma during thyroidectomy.
Singapore Medical Journal 2008 January
INTRODUCTION: We aimed to retrospectively assess the prevalence of microcarcinoma in thyroidectomy specimens from a Greek population and the role of histopathology in determining management of these patients.
METHODS: We used histopathological reports of thyroidectomies performed in a Greek general district hospital. The samples consisted of 191 thyroidectomies performed between January 1997 and July 2001. The female:male ratio was approximately 2:1 and the follow-up period was 327 weeks.
RESULTS: There were 29 microcarcinomas (15.2 percent) with a female:male ratio of 6:1. The prevalence rate in cases with Hashimoto's thyroiditis was significantly higher compared to cases with other benign thyroid pathology (26.8 percent versus 11.9 percent, p-value equals 0.02). Eight microcarcinomas (27.6 percent) were multifocal. The histological type was that of papillary tumour in ten cases (34.5 percent) and follicular in 18 cases (62.1 percent). There were no deaths, recurrences or metastases during the follow-up period.
CONCLUSION: Our results suggest that incidental microcarcinomas are low-risk tumours that do not require routine further intervention. The latter may be necessary for tumours with poor differentiation or for non-incidental microcarcinomas.
METHODS: We used histopathological reports of thyroidectomies performed in a Greek general district hospital. The samples consisted of 191 thyroidectomies performed between January 1997 and July 2001. The female:male ratio was approximately 2:1 and the follow-up period was 327 weeks.
RESULTS: There were 29 microcarcinomas (15.2 percent) with a female:male ratio of 6:1. The prevalence rate in cases with Hashimoto's thyroiditis was significantly higher compared to cases with other benign thyroid pathology (26.8 percent versus 11.9 percent, p-value equals 0.02). Eight microcarcinomas (27.6 percent) were multifocal. The histological type was that of papillary tumour in ten cases (34.5 percent) and follicular in 18 cases (62.1 percent). There were no deaths, recurrences or metastases during the follow-up period.
CONCLUSION: Our results suggest that incidental microcarcinomas are low-risk tumours that do not require routine further intervention. The latter may be necessary for tumours with poor differentiation or for non-incidental microcarcinomas.
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