A 71-year-old woman with recurrent papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) was referred to our hospital. A computed tomography scan revealed extensive recurrence in the neck, invading sternocleidomastoid muscle, internal jugular vein, sternal end of the clavicle, strap muscle and skin; and lateral compartment and subclavian lymph nodes were also involved. Multiple pulmonary micrometastases also noticed. The tumor was considered unresectable; however, the patient was unwilling to accept highly invasive surgery. Therefore, we initiated neoadjuvant therapy with anlotinib, 12mg p.o. daily with a 2-week on/1-week off regimen. The tumor shrunk to resectable state after 4 cycles of treatment, and after 3 weeks of withdrawal, successful surgical resection without gross tumor residual was performed. Pathology confirmed as classic PTC harboring coexistent TERT promoter and BRAF V600E mutations by NGS. After anlotinib therapy, apoptosis induction was observed, and proliferation increased, which was due to three weeks of anlotinib withdraw. Structual recurrence was recorded at 6 months after operation due to no further treatment was taken. Our finding suggests that anlotinib could represent as a good treatment option for patients with locally advanced (with or without distant metastasis) PTC; Anlotinib treatment resulted in sufficient reduction of the tumor mass to enable total thyroidectomy and radioactive iodine treatment, providing long-term control of the disease.
Purpose
To summarize the treatment experience of single-center children with PTC and to explore the influence of initial surgery on the recurrence/metastasis of papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) in children.
Methods
A retrospective analysis of PTC case data of children (≤ 18 years old) who were admitted to and received surgical treatment in the First Affiliated Hospital of Kunming Medical University from January 2012 to December 2020.
Results
A total of 64 children with PTC were included, including 45 cases (70.31%) with a single lesion, and 19 cases (29.69%) with multiple lesions (≥ 2 lesions). Fifteen patients relapsed. Univariate analysis found that gender, thyroidectomy scope, central lymph node dissection, and lateral lymph node dissection were risk factors affecting reoperation; multi-factor analysis showed that central lymph node dissection was an independent risk factor affecting reoperation. According to Kaplan–Meier analysis, central lymph node dissection, total thyroidectomy (TT), lobectomy (LT), and disease-free survival (DFS) were statistically significant (p = 0.000, p = 0.000).
Conclusion
At the time of diagnosis of PTC in children, the rate of lymph node metastasis in the central and lateral cervical regions is high. The vast majority of children with PTC should be treated with TT, and LT is chosen for a small number of patients. CND should be routinely lined.
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