Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
+ Thyroid Nodules and Cancer Netee Papneja, PGY5 + Objectives Review Epidemiology of thyroid nodules/cancers Approach to thyroid nodules Newer evidence re: indications for biopsy Molecular characterization of FNA results Thyroid cancer guidelines + Epidemiology Thyroid nodules are very common Palpable nodules 5% of women 1% of men Ultrasound series 19-67% Autopsy series 37-57% The prevalence of nodules increases with age Prevalence in women 1.5-1.7 times higher than men ATA guidelines 2009 + Etiology of Benign Nodules Focal thyroiditis Benign adenomas – follicular and hurthle cell Thyroid, parathyroid, thyroglossal cysts Post surgical/radiation remnant hyperplasia Rare: teratoma, lipoma, hemangioma + Thyroid Nodules Thyroid cancer which occurs in 5–15% of nodules Type Frequency Prognosis PTC 80% 30-year survival 95% Follicular (including Hurthle cell) 10% 30-year survival 85% Medullary 5% 10-year survival 65% Anaplastic 3% 5-year survival 5% Miscellaneous (lymphoma, fibrosarcoma, SCC, teratomas, metastatic carcinomas) 1% + Thyroid Cancer – Incidence Incidence of thyroid cancer is increasing 1973: 3.6 per 100,000 2009: 8.7 per 100,000 However, mortality rates have stayed the same ? due to actual increase in incidence or increased detection Socioeconomic status and increased access to healthcare resources are associated with higher rates of papillary thyroid cancer (US, Canada) + Thyroid Cancer - Incidence Aim: examined whether the density of endocrinologists and general surgeons use of US were factors associated with increased incidence of thyroid cancer Methods: compared incidence data from SEER database (National Cancer Institute's Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results) from 1999 to 2009 with the density of endocrinologists and general surgeons Udelsman,R.&Zhang,Y.Theepidemicof thyroid cancer in the United States: the role of endocrinologists and ultrasounds. Thyroid http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/thy.2013. + Results: The incidence rates were significantly correlated with the density of endocrinologists (r=0.58, p<0.0001 for males; r=0.44, p=0.0031 for females) and the employment of cervical ultrasonography (r=0.40, p=0.0091 for males; r=0.36, p=0.0197 for females). Conclusions: ~ 50% of the DTC epidemic could be explained by ‘overdiagnosis’ 50% - radiation exposure due to increased use of neck CT scans, chemical exposure and/or obesity Udelsman,R.&Zhang,Y.Theepidemicof thyroid cancer in the United States: the role of endocrinologists and ultrasounds. Thyroid http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/thy.2013. + Thyroid Cancer Risk Factors Extremes of Age Thyroid nodules in children are twice as likely to be malignant In adults, higher rate of malignancy if age > 60 Sex Malignancy rate 2x higher in men compared to women (8% vs 4%) Family history FHx of a thyroid cancer syndrome (eg, familial polyposis, Carney Complex, MEN type 2) 10-fold increased risk of thyroid cancer in first degree relatives of thyroid cancer patients Uptodate: ‘’Overview of thyroid nodule formation’’ + Thyroid Cancer Risk Factors Clinical signs — rapid growth, fixation of the nodule to surrounding tissues, new onset hoarseness or vocal cord paralysis, or the presence of ipsilateral cervical lymphadenopathy Radiation Explosure most important RF = radiation exposure during childhood ~25% have thyroid nodules ~33% have malignant nodules No evidence that radiation-associated thyroid cancers are more aggressive than other thyroid cancers + Thyroid cancer risk factors Radiation exposure - potential sources: medical uses of radiation (eg, childhood malignancies) atomic weapons (eg, Nagasaki/Hiroshima, Japan 1945), or nuclear power plant accidents (eg, Chernobyl 1986, Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster 2011) ionizing radiation to treat benign conditions of the head and neck in 1950s + Investigations + Investigations Laboratory tests Serum TSH If low radionuclide thyroid scan Either 123I or 99mTc pertechnetate Otherwise Further evaluation for possible FNA TSH level correlates to risk of thyroid cancer + Thyroid Cancer and TSH TSH (mU/L) < 0.4 Prevalence of thyroid cancer (%) 2.8% 0.4 – 0.9 3.7% 1.0 – 1.7 8.4% 1.8 – 5.5 12.3% > 5.5 29.7% Boelaert K, Horacek J, Holder RL, et al. Serum thyrotropin concentration as a novel predictor of malignancy in thyroid nodules investigated by fine-needle aspiration. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2006; 91:4295. + Investigations Laboratory tests Serum thyroglobulin (Tg) Can be elevated in most thyroid diseases Insensitive and nonspecific test for thyroid cancer Not recommended as part of the initial evaluation + Investigations Serum calcitonin Screening with calcitonin may detect MTC at an earlier stage (likely present if level > 100 pg/mL) But also detects C-cell hyperplasia and micromedullary carcinoma (clinical significance uncertain) ATA: Cannot recommend either for or against routine measurement False-positive results: hypercalcemia, hypergastrinemia, neuroendocrine tumors, renal insufficiency, papillary and follicular thyroid carcinomas, goiter, and chronic autoimmune thyroiditis prolonged treatment with omeprazole (greater than two to four months), beta-blockers, and glucocorticoids + Ultrasound High Risk Features Low Risk Features Hypoechoic Hyperechoic Increased central vascularity Peripheral vascularity Incomplete halo Complete Halo Microcalcifications Comet-tail Irregular borders Large, coarse calcifications Taller than wide (transverse view) Suspicious lymph nodes + Central Vascularity + Microcalcifications + Irregular Borders + Taller Than Wide + Comet-tail Artifact + Investigations Fine-needle aspiration (FNA) Most accurate and cost effective Sensitivity 76-98%, specificity 71-100% Prior to FNA, only 15% of resected nodules were malignant With FNA, malignancy rate of resected nodules > 50% False positive and non-diagnostic cytology rates lowered with US guidance ATA FNA Indications + High-risk history: History of thyroid cancer in first degree relatives; external beam radiation as a child; exposure to ionizing radiation in childhood or adolescence; prior hemithyroidectomy with discovery of thyroid cancer, 18FDG avidity on PET scanning; MEN2=FMTC-associated RET protooncogene mutation, calcitonin >100 pg=mL. Suspicious features: microcalcifications; hypoechoic; increased nodular vascularity; infiltrative margins; taller than wide on transverse view. + Diagnostic Accuracy of the Ultrasonographic Features for Subcentimeter Thyroid Nodules Suggested by the Revised ATA Guidelines KIM ET AL, THYROID, Volume 23, Number 12, September 2013 Purpose: To analyze the diagnostic performance of the ATA guidelines and compared it to that of other modified guidelines. Methods: 713 nodules 6-10mm (Yonsei University , Korea) Frequencies of US features in benign and malignant nodules were compared Seven modified guidelines were made based on the revised ATA guidelines and from multi- variate analysis results + Modified guidelines 1. excluded ‘‘increased nodular vascularity’’ 2. included composition criteria and only solid nodules were considered 3. excluded the increased nodular vascularity and included solid 4. included macrocalcification 5. included macrocalcification and excluded ‘‘increased nodular vascularity’’ 6. included macrocalcification and only solids 7. Included macrocalcifications and excluded increased nodular vascularity + Results Solid composition and macrocalcification were significantly associated with malignancy (p=0.001 and 0.003). Increased vascularity was not significantly associated with malignant nodules (odds ratio 0.729, p = 0.212). Among the eight guidelines, the ATA guidelines showed the lowest diagnostic performance (Az = 0.616). Excluding increased vascuarity and including solid composition +/macrocalcification to the suspicious US features of the ATA guidelines improved sensitivity (96.6% vs. 97.0%), specificity (26.6% vs. 42.9%), PPV (48.3% vs. 54.7%), and NPV (91.7% vs. 95.2%), thereby resulting in the highest Az value (diagnostic performance) (Az = 0.699, p < 0.001) + Conclusions: This study suggests that excluding increased vascularity and adding solid composition to the suspicious ultrasonographic features of the ATA guidelines would significantly improve the diagnostic performance in subcentimeter nodules for the identification of malignant lesions. + Risk of Thyroid Cancer Based on Thyroid Ultrasound Imaging Characteristics Results of a Population-Based Study Rebecca Smith-Bindman, MD; Paulette Lebda, MD; Vickie A. Feldstein, MD; Dorra Sellami, MD; Ruth B. Goldstein, MD; Natasha Brasic, MD; Chengshi Jin, PhD; John Kornak, PhD JAMA Intern Med. Published online August 26, 2013 + Risk of Thyroid Cancer Based on Thyroid Ultrasound Imaging Characteristics Retrospective case control study 8,806 patients with 11,618 thyroid US at a UCSF facility from January 2000 - March 2005. patients did not have a diagnosis of thyroid cancer at the time of US They linked the patients with the California Cancer Registry and identified 105 who were diagnosed with thyroid cancer The cancer patients were matched with a group of cancer-free control subjects from the same cohort, based on factors such as gender, age and the year of the ultrasound exam + Results: Only 3 US nodule characteristics were associated with the risk of thyroid cancer— microcalcifications (odds ratio [OR], 8.1; 95% CI, 3.8-17.3) size greater than 2 cm (OR, 3.6; 95% CI, 1.7-7.6) an entirely solid composition (OR, 4.0; 95% CI, 1.7-9.2) 1 characteristic = sensitivity 88%, high false-positive rate 44%, a low positive likelihood ratio of 2.0 and 56 biopsies will be performed per cancer diagnosed. 2 characteristics = sensitivity 52%, FPR 7%, the positive likelihood ratio (7.1), and only 16 biopsies performed per cancer diagnosed. + Conclusions: Using only + microcalcifications or combination of both >2cm AND solid as indications for biopsy, estimated risk of cancer in those not biopsied is only ~0.5% May reduce unnecessary biopsies by 90% 20 year survival of DTC is >97% Ongoing surveillance is unlikely to be beneficial as risk for cancer remains low at 10 years ** Doesn’t take into account lymphadenopathy, invasion beyond thyoird capsule, fHx of Thyroid cancer, or radiation history; was a retrospective study + Fine Needle Aspiration: Results + Investigations: FNA Risk of cancer (%) Usual managment 0-3% Clinical f/u Follicular lesion or atypia of undetermined significance 5-15% Repeat FNA Follicular Neoplasm 15-30% Lobectomy Suspicious for malignancy 60-75% Thyroidectomy or lobectomy Non diagnostic 1-4% Repeat FNA -US Malignant 97-99% Thyroidectomy Benign + Management of Indeterminate FNA 10% to 40% of FNA specimens are cytologically indeterminate. Indeterminate results = Follicular Lesion of Undetermined Significance (FLUS)/Atypia of Undetermined Significance (AUS) and (suspicious for) Hürthle/Follicular Neoplasm Risk of malignancy: FLUS/Atypia: 5-15% Follicular Neoplasm: 15-30% + FNA – indeterminate results Repeat FNA with ultrasound guidance Satisfactory specimen in 75% of solid nodules Satisfactory specimen in 50% of cystic nodules On-site cytologic evaluation may improve yield 7% of nodules continue to be nondiagnostic (and may still be malignant) 75 to 95 % of patients undergo surgery for what is ultimately confirmed to be benign increased morbidity, operative risk, and excess cost + FNA – indeterminate results Improvement in the assessment of indeterminate FNA results may allow better risk stratification ATA: Recommendation C - Can consider molecular markers to help guide management e.g. BRAF, RAS, RET/PTC, Pax8-PPAR-gamma, or galectin-3 + Molecular Markers Two approaches to the molecular characterization of FNA results that are commercially available in the United States: identification of particular molecular markers of malignancy, such as BRAF and RAS mutational status Use of high density genomic data for molecular classification (an FNA-trained mRNA classifier) + Veracyte Afirma Gene Classifier GEC assesses gene expression from mRNA from needle washings during a standard FNA procedure Gene expression is compared against 167 genes Veracyte has previously identified as characteristic of benign and malignant nodules Reports the nodule as benign or suspicious Intended as a rule-out test Analysis most effective in identifying lesions with indeterminate cytology that are highly likely to be benign, therefore avoiding surgery THYROID. Volume 23, Number 2, 2013 + Clinical Validity of the Afirma Gene Expression Classifier A large, multi-center (49 sites - 35% academic / 65% community), prospective clinical validation study published in NEJM in 2012 “Double-blind” design patients and physicians blind to molecular result Molecular lab blind to surgical pathology diagnosis and pathologists unaware of molecular results -Alexander EK, et al. Preoperative Diagnosis of Benign Thyroid Nodules with Indeterminate Cytology. N Engl J Med. 2012;367:705-715. + Afirma Gene Expression Classifier Results: For 265 cytologically indeterminate nodules overall NPV was 93% Sensitivity = 92% (7 of 85 cancers, 8%, were incorrectly identified as benign) Specificity = 52% (48% of benign nodules were incorrectly identified as suspicious) The risk of malignancy of a GEC benign result is comparable to that of nodule diagnosed as benign by cytopathology (1) 1. Wang CC et al. A Large Multicenter Correlation Study of Thyroid Nodule Cytopathology and Histopathology. Thyroid. 2011;21:243-251 + Afirma GEC – Real life experience: However, findings of study were obtained in a trial where protocol and enrollment are tightly managed. Understanding how the Afirma GEC performs in a clinical setting remains unclear until recent study published Oct 2013 in JCEM by Erik K. Alexander + E. K. Alexander et al. Multicenter Clinical Experience with the Afirma Gene Expression Classifier. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 2013. Methods: analyzed all patients who had Afirma GEC testing at 5 academic centers between 2010 –2013. 339 patients Results analyzed for pooled test performance, impact on clinical care, and site-to-site variation + Total TOTAL # GEC Benign GEC GEC Suspiciou Non-Diagnostic s 339 174 (51%) 148 (44%) 17 (5%) 6 Lost 3 Sx 2 repeat GEC 2 repeat FNA 2 repeat FNA 1 refused further testing AUS/FLUS 165 91 (55%) 66 (40%) 8 (5%) Follicular Neoplasm 161 79 (49%) 73 (45%) 9 (6%) Suspicious for Malignancy 13 4 (31%) 9 (69%) 0 + Results: 148 Afirma GEC “Suspicious” 141 of 148 (95%) surgery recommended 121 of 148 (82%) surgery performed Histopathology Malignant: 53 (44%) •AUS/FLUS Number Histopathology Malignant: •48 •23 (48%) -21 PTC 1 Follicular/1 other •Follicular Neoplasm •65 •24 (37%) -19 PTC 4 Follicular/1 Hurthle •Suspicious for Malignancy: •8 •6 (75%) -6 Papillary Carcinoma + 174 Afirma GEC “Benign” 4 of 174 surgery recommended (3 FLUS/1 SUS) 11 of 174 (6%) surgery performed Histopathology Malignant: 1/11 = 0.6cm PTC Initial validation study: 38% indeterminate nodules were benign, however in this study 51% were benign GEC result Afirma GEC testing after 1st study only recommended for AUS/ FLUS and/or FN cytology; not suspicious. This study 96% cyto indeterminate samples were AUS/FLUS and/or FN explaining the increased proportion of benign GEC results. + Benign Afirma GEC results: Only 71/ 174 patients (41%) had documented followup at a mean of 8.5 months following GEC testing 10/71 – clinical exam followup 61/71 – repeat US 11/71 of these patients underwent thyroid surgery (personal preference or compressive symptoms) 10/ 11 = benign histologically 1/11 confirmed cancer (1.0cm US nodules which proved a 0.6cm PTC histologically) Summary: 1/71 GEC benign proved cancerous + Clinical Impact: 95% of Afirma GEC “suspicious” nodules were referred for thyroid surgery in comparison to only 2% of Afirma GEC “benign” nodules in an academic clinical setting, a 76% reduction in surgery was observed when the Afirma GEC was applied to patients in whom surgery would otherwise have been typically performed + Results: current standard of care practice: $12,172 per patient Using GEC: $10,719 cost savings due to: less surgeries GEC test sensitivity was assumed to be 91% This cost analysis states that only 1.4% of malignant nodules would be missed by the classifier + The Asuragen miRInform Molecular Panel Panel of molecular tests used to to improve preoperative cytological diagnostic accuracy for indeterminate thyroid nodules These markers are recommended by the ATA (recommendation rating of "C”) A rule-in method that is designed to have a high predictive specificity; that is, a positive test is highly associated with malignant histology. + The Asuragen miRInform Molecular Panel 17 validated molecular markers to identify mutations with strong associations with papillary and follicular thyroid cancers These mutations and translocations are found in up to 80% of papillary (BRAF, RAS, RET/PTC) and 70% of follicular (RAS, PAX8/PPARγ) + + The Asuragen miRInform Molecular Panel It is commercially available No published validation of this method yet However, there is a published experience with the noncommercial use of these markers as prospective predictors of thyroid cancer in FNA samples from academic centers + Nikiforov YE et al. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 96:3390–3397 Objective: to study the clinical utility of molecular testing of thyroid FNA samples with indeterminate cytology. Design: material from 1056 consecutive thyroid FNA samples with indeterminate cytology was used for prospective molecular analysis and tested for a panel of mutations consisted of BRAF V600E, NRAS codon 61, HRAS codon 61, and KRAS codons 12/13 point mutations and RET/PTC1, RET/PTC3, and PAX8/PPAR rearrangements + Results: Risk of malignancy based on cytology: AUS/FLUS = 14% FN/SFN = 27% SMC =54% Risk of malignancy if + for any mutations in panel: AUS/FLUS = 88% FN/SFN = 87% SMC = 95% SFN = suspicious for follicular neoplasm; SMC= suspicious for malignant cell Nikiforov YE et al. 2011 Impact of mutational testing on the diagnosis and management of patients wit cytologically indeterminate thyroid nodules: a prospective analysis of 1056 FNA samples. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 96:3390–3397. + This method demonstrated an overall specificity of 98%. Overall sensitivity of this method is only 60% only 2% of benign nodules were positive for a genetic marker 6 % (of FL/AUS) and 14 % (FN) were negative for these mutations and proved to be cancer on surgical histology Clinical utility: Consider upfront total thyroidectomy for molecular positive result, but initial diagnostic lobectomy is still indicated with mutation-negative specimens + Costs for Molecular Panel miRInform Thyroid panel retail price = $2250 Medicare reimbursement for this test is $650, and from private insurers varies up to $950. Steven P. Hodak et al. Information for Clinicians: Commercially Available Molecular Dia Testing in the Evaluation of Thyroid Nodule Fine-Needle Aspiration Specimens THYROID Volume 23, Number 2, 2013 + Molecular Panel : Cost Analysis Standard of care: $578 and molecular testing: $682 molecular testing resulted in decreased diagnostic lobectomies (9.7% v. standard of care 11.6%) while initial total thyroidectomy was more frequent (18.2% v. standard of care 16.1%) molecular testing added a diagnostic cost of $5,031 to the cost of each additional indicated total thyroidectomy bringing the total cost to $16,414. However, the cumulative cost was still less than the cost of a lobectomy ($7,684) followed by completion thyroidectomy ($11,954) in the standard-of-care cohort In sensitivity analysis, savings were demonstrated if molecular testing cost was less than $870 Yip L et al. 2012 Cost impact of molecular testing for indeterminate thyroid nodule fine-needle aspiration biopsies. J Clin En- docrinol Metab 97:1905–1912. + Next Generation Sequencing Test (NGST) ThyroSeq new method with the aim of detecting most point mutations and small insertions or deletions known to occur in thyroid cancer targets 12 cancer genes with 284 mutational hot spots The test made its debut at UPMC/UPCI Multidisciplinary Thyroid Center at the University of Pittsburgh + Next Generation Sequencing Test Study published 2013 228 thyroid neoplastic and nonneoplastic specimens assessed Clin Thyroidol 2013;25:288–289 Next-Generation Sequencing Has Identified New Oncogenic Mutations in Thyroid Nodules + Next Generation Sequencing Test ThyroSeq DNA assay identified mutations in: 19 of 27 of PTC (70%) 25 of 30 follicular variant PTCs (83%) 3 of 10 poorly differentiated carcinomas (30%) 20 of 27 anaplastic (ATCs) (74%) 11 of 15 medullary thyroid carcinomas (73%) 5 of 83 benign nodules (6%) were positive for mutations Clin Thyroidol 2013;25:288–289 Next-Generation Sequencing Has Identified New Oncogenic Mutations in Thyroid Nodules + Next Generation Sequencing Test Conclusions: Allows testing for multiple mutations with high accuracy and sensitivity Point mutations were detected in 30% to 83% of specific types of thyroid cancer and in only 6% of benign thyroid nodules Discovery of uncommon mutations, such as PTEN, TP53, PI3KCA, and TSHR. With the addition of these mutations to those of BRAF, RAS, and the PAX8/PPARg and RET/PTC rearrangements, 80% of thyroid cancers are now believed to have detectable mutations + Use Molecular Methods Experience with these molecular methods remains limited, and no test has perfect sensitivity and specificity. The ATA feels that until expert consensus review of existing data (now underway by the ATA Guidelines Task Force) can be completed, no evidence-based recommendation for or against the use of these methods can be made. Clinicians are therefore advised to consider the use of these genetic diagnosis methods with appropriate caution + Conclusion Thyroid cancer incidence rates have been increasing worldwide ?due to increased detection rates from US No associated higher mortality ATA guidelines may be modified to decrease frequency of FNA done New molecular methods for indeterminate FNA samples seem to be promising, but not available in Canada yet + Questions?