Does the extent of neck surgery based on preoperative calcitonin level influence survival in medullary thyroid carcinoma: a retrospective tertiary centre experience
W Ansley, A Kamyab, L Noden, B Odutoye, P Williamson, KH Wong, P Dent, A Sharma, A Weller, G Pitiyage, E Ofo

TL;DR
This study examines whether preoperative calcitonin levels influence survival outcomes in medullary thyroid carcinoma patients undergoing different types of neck surgery.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the efficacy of using preoperative calcitonin levels to guide surgical decisions in MTC patients.
Findings
No significant difference in survival was found between high and low calcitonin groups.
Patients with high calcitonin levels did not show improved outcomes with lateral neck dissection.
A selective approach based on clinical findings may be more effective than calcitonin-guided surgery.
Abstract
Medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) is a rare thyroid cancer arising from the calcitonin-secreting parafollicular cells. Previous studies suggested a preoperative calcitonin level >200ng/l is an indication for prophylactic lateral neck dissection (LND) to remove micrometastases and improve survival outcomes. This retrospective single-centre study assessed the efficacy of preoperative calcitonin levels as a marker for determining need for prophylactic LND in MTC. Data were obtained on demographics, preoperative calcitonin levels, size and laterality of index tumour, type of neck dissection (central neck dissection (CND), LND), nodes removed, levels with involved nodes, number of nodes histologically involved, mortality, adjuvant therapy and locoregional recurrence. A total of 33 patients were identified from St George's University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust between 1 January 2001 and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsThyroid Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment · Thyroid and Parathyroid Surgery · Pituitary Gland Disorders and Treatments
