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Αλέξανδρος Γ. Σφακιανάκης

Tuesday, February 16, 2021

Patterns and Predictors of Metastatic Spread to the Neck in Pediatric Thyroid Carcinoma

xlomafota13 shared this article with you from Inoreader

Objective

Evaluate patterns and predictors of spread to the neck in pediatric metastatic differentiated thyroid carcinoma (DTC).

Methods

Patients <18 years old undergoing thyroidectomy by a single surgeon from January 2015 to December 2019 were included. Neck sublevels were removed separately according to AJCC boundaries. Clinical outcomes included nerve injury, hypocalcemia, hematoma, and residual tumor.

Results

Forty‐eight children underwent thyroid surgery. Thirty (63%) were for malignancy, 27 (90%) of which were DTC. Nineteen (70%) patients with DTC underwent 24 neck dissections; 19 central plus lateral and 5 central alone. The female to male ratio increased from 1:1 to 3:1 with age. Two children with lateral neck involvement had sub‐centimeter primaries. Patients requiring neck dissection were more likely to have 1) diffuse sclerosing or tall cell variant, 2) T3 or T4 disease, 3) genetic mutation, 4) lymphatic invasion, 5) extracapsular extension, 6) positive resection margin. Levels IIA (79%), III (89%), IV (84%), VI (100%) were most commonly involved. Levels IB (16%), IIB (16%), VB (16%) were also involved, often without involvement of adjacent levels. Permanent injuries included one unilateral recurrent laryngeal nerve, one mild marginal mandibular nerve and one mild accessory nerve. Hypocalcemia was highest following neck dissection for malignant disease. One patient was re‐ operated for a mediastinal node. Most patients with N1 disease received radioactive iodine. Most patients have no evidence or indeterminate disease on long‐term follow‐up.

Conclusion

Children with lateral nodal spread from DTC should be considered for neck dissection including Levels IB, IIA, IIB, III, IV, VB, bilateral VI.

Level of Evidence

4 Laryngoscope, 131:E1002–E1009, 2021

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