Does It Work in Childhood and Adolescence? The Predictive Role of Postoperative/preablative Stimulated Thyroglobulin Levels in Paediatric Thyroid Cancer. A Systematic Review of the Literature
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Background: Thyroglobulin is a well-established disease marker during follow-up in paediatric differentiated thyroid cancer. However, no conclusive data on the role of endogenously stimulated thyroglobulin after thyroidectomy (ptTg) in predicting disease-specific outcomes are available. This review aims to establish the prognostic value of ptTg in children with DTC.
Methods: Online medical databases were searched for studies evaluating the association between ptTg and disease-specific outcomes in DTC-affected children. Documents not in English, preclinical studies, other review articles, case reports, and small case series were excluded. The risk of bias was assessed with the QUADAS-2 tool.
Results: Twelve studies, analysing 1043 children in total, were included in the review. They all had a retrospective design and were published between 2016 and 2022. Of all patients, 1008 (97%) and 849 (81%) had undergone thyroidectomy and RAI, respectively. Eight studies (756 children) evaluated the correlation between ptTg and disease persistence/relapse: six reported a significant association between these parameters; a specific ptTg cut-off (10-14 ng/ml) was identified at the multivariate analysis in three studies. The remaining four studies assessed the link between ptTg levels and disease extension, with three reporting a correlation between ptTg and lung/nodal metastases.
Discussion: ptTg is a readily available and inexpensive parameter, bearing a strong prognostic power in identifying disease persistence, relapse, and the presence of metastases in children affected by DTC.
Performance of ACR-TIRADS in assessing thyroid nodules does not vary according to patient age.
Leoncini A, Curti M, Ruinelli L, Gamarra E, Trimboli P Hormones (Athens). 2024; 23(4):667-674.
PMID: 39028415 PMC: 11519249. DOI: 10.1007/s42000-024-00585-4.
Song C, Luo J, Pang Y, He R, Li X, Chen G Front Oncol. 2024; 14:1340872.
PMID: 38463235 PMC: 10921230. DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2024.1340872.