Goitre Flashcards

1
Q

What is a goitre?

A

any enlargement of the thyroid gland: diffuse or multinodular

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2
Q

What are the different causes behind a goitre?

A
  • disorders most often due to a lack of dietary iodine or may be due to a lack of bio-availability of iodine
  • reduced T3/T4 causes a rise in TSH production which stimulates gland enlargement
  • may maintain a euthyroid state or if compensation fails have goitrous hypothyroidism
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3
Q

there are two types of diffuse goitre - what are these?

A

endemic (>10% population) or sporadic

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4
Q

What is the epidemiology of a sporadic goitre?

A
  • F>M

- puberty and young adults

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5
Q

what are the 3 aetiologies of a sporadic goitre?

A
  • Ingestion of substances limiting T3/T4 production
  • inborn error of metabolism
  • in most cases cause is unknown
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6
Q

How do sporadic diffuse goitres present? what is seen on TFTs? what can be seen in children?

A

usually euthyroid and present with mass effects
-T3/T4 normal but TSH usually high/upper limit of normal

-in children dyshormonogenesis may cause cretinism

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7
Q

Multinodular goitre: what are the three different pathophysiologies of this?

A

Could be an evolution from a longstanding simple goitre:

  • recurrant hyperplasia and involution
  • enlargement can be large
  • differential is thyroid neoplasm

Variation of responses of follicular cells to external stimuli:
-mutations of TSH signalling pathway

Could be due to rupture of follicles, haemorrhage, scarring, calcification

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8
Q

Adenoma and carcinoma are the different neoplasms that can be found in thyroid, what type of adenoma is found? what type of carcinomas occur?

A

Follicular adenoma

Carcinoma:

  • papillary (75-85%)
  • follicular (10-20%)
  • Medullary (5%)
  • anaplastic (<5%)
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9
Q

what is a follicular adenoma? what are they composed of? What are these difficult to distinguish from? are they usually functional or non-functional? what can they sometimes secrete? what mutation do <20% follicular adenomas have?

A

This is a discrete solitary mass encapsulated by a surrounding collagen cuff
-composed of neoplastic thyroid follicles

can be difficult to distinguish from:

  • dominant nodule in multinodular goitre
  • follicular carcinoma
  • usually non-functional
  • can secrete thyroid hormones = thyrotoxicosis (in these adenomas there are mutations in the TSH receptor signalling pathways)
  • <20% follicular adenomas have mutation RAS or P1K3CA
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10
Q

Thyroid carcinomas: what is the epidemiology?

A
  • female predominance

- early childhood

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11
Q

what environmental aetiologies are assoc. with papillary carcinoma and follicular carcinoma?

A

Ionising radiation: papillary carcinoma

Iodine deficiency: follicular carcinoma

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12
Q

What genetic aetiologies are assoc. with papillary, follicular, anaplastic and medullary thyroid carcinoma?

A

Papillary: RET, NTKR1, BRAF mutations
Follicular: P13k/AKT pathway mutations
Anaplastic: features of above, p53 and bcatenin mutations
medullary: MEN2

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13
Q

Papillary thyroid carcinoma:

  • is this common?
  • what is the usual pathology?
  • how can this present which is unlike follicular carcinoma?
  • prognosis
A

Most common thyroid carcinoma

Pathology:

  • usually solitary nodule in thyroid
  • can be multifocal
  • often cystic
  • may be calcified

Some present with lymph node mets which is unlike follicular carcinoma

Overall good survival rate (95%+ at 10yrs) but worse if:

  • > 40yrs old
  • extrathyroid extension
  • distant mets
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14
Q

Follicular thyroid carcinoma:

  • is this common?
  • what is the usual pathology?
  • how does this spread usually?
  • what is the difference between a follicular adenoma and a follicular carcinoma?
  • prognosis
A

2nd most common thyroid carcinoma

Pathology:

  • usually single nodule
  • slowly enlarging
  • painless and non-functional

Haematogenous spread to bone, lungs, liver and rarely lymphatics

Need vascular or capsular invasion for a follicular adenoma to = carcinoma

Prognosis:
-depends on extent invasion/stage at presentation (higher = worse)

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15
Q

Medullar carcinoma?

  • is this common?
  • what is the usual pathology?
  • what are the three different types?
  • What type of deposition is this assoc. with?
A

Rare
-derived from c-cells (can secrete calcitonin)

Sporadic (70%) or Familial or assoc. MEN2

Assoc. with amyloid deposition

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16
Q

Sporadic medullary carcinoma:

  • what age does this affect patients?
  • what is the pathology usually?
  • how do they behave usually?
  • what can they cause clinically?
A

Assoc. with:
-40-50yrs

Pathology: usually a solitary nodule

Behave aggressively usually

Clinically:

  • Neck mass with local effects: dysphagia, hoarseness, airway compromise
  • paraneoplastic syndrome (VIP production causes diarrhoea, ACTH production causes cushings)
17
Q

Familial medullary carcinoma:

-what is the pathology?

A

Pathology:

  • bilateral/multicentric
  • c cell hyperplasia
18
Q

Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma:

  • what is the pathology?
  • who does this usually effect?
  • how does the tumour behave?
A

Pathology: undifferentiated and aggressive tumour

Usually older patients
-may occur in those with a history of differentiated thyroid cancer

this tumour grows rapidly and involves neck structures = death

19
Q

What is thyroid cytology? which lesions can be identified easily and which are more difficult to assess? what is the classification of thyroid cytology?

A

-Cells are studied from aspirates without architecture = minimally invasive assessment

  • Papillary lesions can be identified from typical nuclear features
  • follicular lesions difficult to assess as relation to capsule not assessed
Thy1 - insufficient/uninterpretable
Thy2 - benign
Thy3 - atypia prob. benign/equivocal
Thy4: atypia suspicious of malignancy
Thy5: malignant
(all follicular lesions graded as Thy3)