Follicular Carcinoma of Thyroid Flashcards
what is it?
2nd most common thyroid carcinoma
Usually a single nodule
o Slowly enlarging, painless and non-functional
o Rarely lymphatic spread but propensity for haematogenous spread – bone, lungs and liver
A differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC), most take up iodine and secrete thyroglobulin and are driven by TSH
Spread tends to be haematogenous
what % of thyroid carcinomas are follicular?
10-20%
how are they classified?
Diagnosis is dependent on invasion of the capsule or vascular invasion
Classified as minimally invasive or widely invasive FTC
who gets it?
more common in females
40s and 50s
growth pattern
Widely invasive
o More solid architecture
o Less follicular architecture
o More mitotic activity
Minimally invasive
o Follicular architecture (well differentiated)
o May have part surrounding capsule
o Difficult to distinguish from adenoma
o Follicular adenoma vs carcinoma – need vascular or capsular invasion
o Usually treated by thyroid lobectomy – if significant vascular invasion consider a total thyroidectomy
o Most present U3 lesion and diagnosed by lobectomy
o Capsular invasion can’t be detected by FNA
how is it investigated?
Ultrasound and guided FNA of the lesion
Can involve excision and biopsy of the lymph node
Isotope biopsy, CT and MRI are not beneficial
Pre-operative laryngoscopy if vocal cord palsy is clinically suspected
post-operative
Check calcium within 24 hrs
Calcium replacement initiated if corrected if falls below 2mmol/l
IV calcium for calcium levels below 1.8mmol/l or symptomatic
Discharge on T3 or T4
Whole body iodine scan
o 3-6 months post-op
o T4 stopped 4 weeks before
o T3 stopped 2 weeks before
o rhTSH far better so don’t need to stop T3/T4
o TSH should be > 20 for best results
o Scan informs treatment decisions