Thursday, March 31, 2016

Thyroid Cancer

Thyroid Cancer

Thyroid Cancer Symptoms, Diagnosis, and Treatments

This article will highlight some common thyroid cancer signs and symptoms as well as thyroid cancer prognosis and treatments.Visit our thyroid cancer Patients' Guide to Thyroid Cancer for complete information on thyroid cancer types, causes, diagnosis, and treatments.

In this Article

  • Thyroid Cancer Symptoms
  • Types of Thyroid Cancer
  • Thyroid Cancer Prognosis
  • Overview of Typical Thyroid Cancer Treatment
Cold nodule in thyroid

 


Thyroid Cancer Symptoms

Some thyroid cancer signs and symptoms include a hoarse voice, neck pain, and enlarged lymph nodes. Although as much as 75% of the population will have thyroid nodules, the vast majority are benign. Young people usually don't have thyroid nodules, but as people age, they're more likely to develop a nodule. By the time we are 80, 90% of us will have at least one nodule.
Fewer than 1% of all thyroid nodules are malignant (cancerous). A nodule that is cold on scan (shown in photo above and outlined in red and yellow) is more likely to be malignant. However, the majority of these are benign as well. You can read more information about thyroid nodules and their potential to be malignant in our articles below:
  • Introduction to Thyroid Nodules
  • The Workup of Thyroid Nodules and the Role of Fine Needle Aspiration (FNA) Biopsy
  • The Role of Thyroid Ultrasound and What It Means
Talk to your doctor about any questions you have about thyroid cancer signs and symptoms.

Types of Thyroid Cancer

There are 4 main types of thyroid cancer, and some are more common than others.
Thyroid cancer type and incidence:
  • Papillary and/or mixed papillary/follicular thyroid cancer: ~ 80%
  • Follicular and/or Hurthle cell thyroid cancer: ~ 15%
  • Medullary thyroid cancer: ~ 3%
  • Anaplastic thyroid cancer: ~ 2%

Thyroid Cancer Prognosis

Most thyroid cancers are very curable. In fact, the most common types of thyroid cancer (papillary and follicular thyroid cancer) are the most curable. In younger patients, both papillary and follicular cancers have a more than 97% cure rate if treated appropriately. Both papillary and follicular thyroid cancers are typically treated with complete removal of the lobe of the thyroid that harbors the cancer, in addition to the removal of most or all of the other side.
The bottom line is that most thyroid cancers are papillary thyroid cancer, and this is one of the most curable cancers of all cancers. Treated correctly, the cure rate is extremely high.
Medullary thyroid cancer is significantly less common but has a worse prognosis. Medullary cancers tend to spread to large numbers of lymph nodes very early on, and therefore require a much more aggressive operation than the more localized thyroid cancers, such as papillary and follicular thyroid cancer.
This cancer requires complete thyroid removal plus a dissection to remove the lymph nodes of the front and sides of the neck.
The least common type of thyroid cancer is anaplastic thyroid cancer, which has a very poor prognosis. Anaplastic thyroid cancer tends to be found after it has spread, and it is incurable in most cases. Note: Chief Justice William Rehnquist had anaplastic thyroid cancer. You can read about anaplastic thyroid cancer in our in-depth article.
It is very uncommon to survive anaplastic thyroid cancer, as often the operation cannot remove all of the tumor. These patients often require a tracheostomy during the treatment, and treatment is much more aggressive than for other types of thyroid cancer.

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