Context
How lymph node metastasis (LNM)-associated mortality risk is affected by BRAF V600E in papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) remains undefined.
Objective
To study whether BRAF V600E affected LNM-associated mortality in PTC.
Design, Setting, Participants
We retrospectively analyzed the effect of LNM on PTC-specific mortality with respect to BRAF status in 2638 patients (2015 females and 623 males) from 11 centers in 6 countries, with median age of 46 (IQR 35–58) years and median follow-up time of 58 (IQR 26–107) months.
Results
Overall, LNM showed a modest mortality risk in wild-type BRAF patients but a strong one in BRAFV600E patients. In conventional PTC (CPTC), LNM showed no increased mortality risk in wild-type BRAF patients but a robustly increased one in BRAFV600E patients; mortality rates were 2/659 (0.3%) versus 4/321 (1.2%) in non-LNM versus LNM patients (P=0.094) with wild-type BRAF, corresponding to a hazard ratio (HR) (95% CI) of 4.37 (0.80-23.89), which remained insignificant at 3.32 (0.52-21.14) after multivariate adjustment. In BRAFV600E CPTC, morality rates were 7/515 (1.4%) versus 28/363 (7.7%) in non-LNM versus LNM patients (P<0.001), corresponding to HR of 4.90 (2.12-11.29) or, after multivariate adjustment, 5.76 (2.19-15.11). Adjusted mortality HR of coexisting LNM and BRAFV600E versus absence of both was 27.39 (5.15-145.80), with Kaplan-Meier analyses showing a similar synergism.
Conclusions
LNM-associated mortality risk is sharply differentiated by the BRAF status in PTC; in CPTC, LNM showed no increased mortality risk with wild-type BRAF but a robust one with BRAF mutation. These results have strong clinical relevance.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.