Goitre Flashcards
What is a goitre?
any enlargement of the thyroid gland: diffuse or multinodular
What are the different causes behind a goitre?
- 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
there are two types of diffuse goitre - what are these?
endemic (>10% population) or sporadic
What is the epidemiology of a sporadic goitre?
- F>M
- puberty and young adults
what are the 3 aetiologies of a sporadic goitre?
- Ingestion of substances limiting T3/T4 production
- inborn error of metabolism
- in most cases cause is unknown
How do sporadic diffuse goitres present? what is seen on TFTs? what can be seen in children?
usually euthyroid and present with mass effects
-T3/T4 normal but TSH usually high/upper limit of normal
-in children dyshormonogenesis may cause cretinism
Multinodular goitre: what are the three different pathophysiologies of this?
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
Adenoma and carcinoma are the different neoplasms that can be found in thyroid, what type of adenoma is found? what type of carcinomas occur?
Follicular adenoma
Carcinoma:
- papillary (75-85%)
- follicular (10-20%)
- Medullary (5%)
- anaplastic (<5%)
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?
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
Thyroid carcinomas: what is the epidemiology?
- female predominance
- early childhood
what environmental aetiologies are assoc. with papillary carcinoma and follicular carcinoma?
Ionising radiation: papillary carcinoma
Iodine deficiency: follicular carcinoma
What genetic aetiologies are assoc. with papillary, follicular, anaplastic and medullary thyroid carcinoma?
Papillary: RET, NTKR1, BRAF mutations
Follicular: P13k/AKT pathway mutations
Anaplastic: features of above, p53 and bcatenin mutations
medullary: MEN2
Papillary thyroid carcinoma:
- is this common?
- what is the usual pathology?
- how can this present which is unlike follicular carcinoma?
- prognosis
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
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
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)
Medullar carcinoma?
- is this common?
- what is the usual pathology?
- what are the three different types?
- What type of deposition is this assoc. with?
Rare
-derived from c-cells (can secrete calcitonin)
Sporadic (70%) or Familial or assoc. MEN2
Assoc. with amyloid deposition