# A clinical study of microwave ablation for cervical lymph node metastasis from papillary thyroid cancer

**Authors:** Jie Wu, Ying Wei, Zhen-long Zhao, Shi-liang Cao, Yan Li, Li-li Peng, Shu-qi Li, Ming-an Yu

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2025.1580765 · Frontiers in Endocrinology · 2025-04-25

## TL;DR

This study shows that microwave ablation is a safe and effective treatment for cervical lymph node metastasis in patients with papillary thyroid cancer.

## Contribution

The study evaluates microwave ablation's efficacy and safety across different treatment stages of papillary thyroid cancer.

## Key findings

- Microwave ablation achieved a 100% technical success rate with significant reduction in lymph node size.
- Transient hoarseness was the main complication, with region VI lymph node location as a risk factor.
- The recurrence rate was 22.8%, with no significant difference among treatment subgroups.

## Abstract

The aim of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of microwave ablation (MWA) for cervical lymph node metastasis (LNM) in initially treated, post-ablation and post-resection papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) patients.

A total of 131 patients with 535 LNM from PTC who underwent ultrasound-guided MWA were included in the retrospective study. Patients were divided into three subgroups on the basis of treatment timing: initially treated, after PTC ablation (post-ablation), or after resection (post-resection). Changes in cervical metastatic lymph nodes as well as the incidences of complications, tumour recurrence and progression were compared.

The technical success rate of this study was 100% (535/535). Compared with those before MWA, the mean largest diameter and volume of the metastatic lymph nodes were significantly lower (p <0.01) at each follow-up. Transient hoarseness was the exclusive major complication with a total rate of 5.3% (9/171), which significantly differed in terms of incidence among the three subgroups (p<0.01). Lymph node location in region VI was an independent risk factor for transient hoarseness. The total recurrence rate was 22.8% (39/171) without statistically significant difference among the three sub-groups (p=0.20). Two cases received repeated surgery, while re-ablation was conducted successfully in all rest of cases. Data from the latest follow-up revealed one death due to LNM.

MWA is a safe and effective treatment option for LNM in initially treated, post-resection and post-ablation PTC patients.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** papillary thyroid cancer (MONDO:0005075)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** hoarseness (MESH:D006685), PTC (MESH:D000077273), tumour (MESH:D009369), death (MESH:D003643), LNM (MESH:D008207)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

25 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12061701/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12061701