Thyroid Nodules: Clinical, Pathologic and Pathophysiologic Correlates Flashcards
- Recognize the pathological disorders that can lead to the appearance of a solitary or multiple thyroid nodules.
Benign
-Adenoma
Malignant
- Papillary (85-90%) multifocal, LN
- Follicular/Hurthle (5%) vascular spread
- Anaplastic (
- Describe the tests that are helpful to evaluate a thyroid nodule.
Do TSH first
Do Diagniostic ultrasound
Do fine needle aspirate
if biopsy suspicious–> do a scan–> increased uptake is likely not cancer
- Outline the general principles of treatment of benign and malignant thyroid tumors.
benign- clinical follow up
malignant- thyroidectomy
What is most common gene mutated in thyroid cancer?
BRAF
Papillary carcinoma
most common, excellent prognosis, orphan annie eyes, psammoma bodies, nuclear grooves, lymphatic invasion common, RET and BRAF mutations
follicular carcinoma
good prognosis, invades thyroid capsule
medullary carcinoma
from parafollicular C cells, produces calcitonin, hematogenous spreade common associated with MEN 2A/2B
Thyroglobulin -, Calcitonin +, Chromogranin +
undifferentiated/anaplastic carcinoma
older patients, invades local structures, very poor prognosis
lymphoma
associated with hashimoto thyroiditis
what is proto oncogen signaling in thyroid cancer
MAP kinase–>RET, RAS, BRAF, MET/ERK–> cell growth
PAP carcinoma 20% RET-PTC rearrangement
RAS point mutation 20%
BRAF mutation 40%
loss of P53 makes things way worse
B-catenin makes things way worse
-both cxan make transition to anaplastic