Follicular Carcinoma of Thyroid Flashcards

1
Q

what is it?

A

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

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2
Q

what % of thyroid carcinomas are follicular?

A

10-20%

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3
Q

how are they classified?

A

Diagnosis is dependent on invasion of the capsule or vascular invasion
Classified as minimally invasive or widely invasive FTC

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4
Q

who gets it?

A

more common in females

40s and 50s

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5
Q

growth pattern

A

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

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6
Q

how is it investigated?

A

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

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7
Q

post-operative

A

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

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