» Articles » PMID: 38319329

Thyroid Cancer: A Review

Overview
Journal JAMA
Specialty General Medicine
Date 2024 Feb 6
PMID 38319329
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Importance: Approximately 43 720 new cases of thyroid carcinoma are expected to be diagnosed in 2023 in the US. Five-year relative survival is approximately 98.5%. This review summarizes current evidence regarding pathophysiology, diagnosis, and management of early-stage and advanced thyroid cancer.

Observations: Papillary thyroid cancer accounts for approximately 84% of all thyroid cancers. Papillary, follicular (≈4%), and oncocytic (≈2%) forms arise from thyroid follicular cells and are termed well-differentiated thyroid cancer. Aggressive forms of follicular cell-derived thyroid cancer are poorly differentiated thyroid cancer (≈5%) and anaplastic thyroid cancer (≈1%). Medullary thyroid cancer (≈4%) arises from parafollicular C cells. Most cases of well-differentiated thyroid cancer are asymptomatic and detected during physical examination or incidentally found on diagnostic imaging studies. For microcarcinomas (≤1 cm), observation without surgical resection can be considered. For tumors larger than 1 cm with or without lymph node metastases, surgery with or without radioactive iodine is curative in most cases. Surgical resection is the preferred approach for patients with recurrent locoregional disease. For metastatic disease, surgical resection or stereotactic body irradiation is favored over systemic therapy (eg, lenvatinib, dabrafenib). Antiangiogenic multikinase inhibitors (eg, sorafenib, lenvatinib, cabozantinib) are approved for thyroid cancer that does not respond to radioactive iodine, with response rates 12% to 65%. Targeted therapies such as dabrafenib and selpercatinib are directed to genetic mutations (BRAF, RET, NTRK, MEK) that give rise to thyroid cancer and are used in patients with advanced thyroid carcinoma.

Conclusions: Approximately 44 000 new cases of thyroid cancer are diagnosed each year in the US, with a 5-year relative survival of 98.5%. Surgery is curative in most cases of well-differentiated thyroid cancer. Radioactive iodine treatment after surgery improves overall survival in patients at high risk of recurrence. Antiangiogenic multikinase inhibitors and targeted therapies to genetic mutations that give rise to thyroid cancer are increasingly used in the treatment of metastatic disease.

Citing Articles

Reprogramming of Thyroid Cancer Metabolism: from Mechanism to Therapeutic Strategy.

Wan Y, Li G, Cui G, Duan S, Chang S Mol Cancer. 2025; 24(1):74.

PMID: 40069775 PMC: 11895238. DOI: 10.1186/s12943-025-02263-4.


The Role of Yes-Associated Protein in Inflammatory Diseases and Cancer.

Zhong B, Du J, Liu F, Sun S MedComm (2020). 2025; 6(3):e70128.

PMID: 40066231 PMC: 11892025. DOI: 10.1002/mco2.70128.


Advanced pathological subtype classification of thyroid cancer using efficientNetB0.

Guo H, Zhang J, Li Y, Pan X, Sun C Diagn Pathol. 2025; 20(1):28.

PMID: 40055769 PMC: 11887243. DOI: 10.1186/s13000-025-01621-6.


Ultrasonic radiomics in predicting pathologic type for thyroid cancer: a preliminary study using radiomics features for predicting medullary thyroid carcinoma.

Zhang D, Yang F, Hou W, Wang Y, Mu J, Wang H Front Endocrinol (Lausanne). 2025; 16:1428888.

PMID: 40046879 PMC: 11880605. DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2025.1428888.


UBC9: a novel therapeutic target in papillary thyroid carcinoma.

Zhang H, Wu J, Hu H, Tang H, Tan K, Hu M J Endocrinol Invest. 2025; .

PMID: 40025314 DOI: 10.1007/s40618-024-02523-y.