key: cord-0020288-ws7o2ae0 authors: D’Amore, Annamaria; Patrone, Renato; Docimo, Ludovico; Conzo, Giovanni; Lombardi, Celestino Pio title: Thyroid Cancer: Toward Surgical Evolution date: 2021-08-14 journal: J Clin Med DOI: 10.3390/jcm10163582 sha: b780782659a251bab9a9bf8442e96bb5c5a7e051 doc_id: 20288 cord_uid: ws7o2ae0 nan It has been more than five years since the American Thyroid Association (ATA) and the Italian consensus on thyroid cancer was published [1, 2] . It revaluated and retrospectively analyzed the results of thyroid cancer treatment and the outcomes in terms of disease-free survival and recurrence rate. Both suggested a more conservative approach for low/intermediate-risk well-differentiated thyroid cancers (DTCs), rehabilitating hemithyroidectomy as the surgical approach of choice. It is well known that DTCs represent the most common of all thyroid cancers [3] . Moreover, in recent decades, we have assisted in a continual and constant increase in the number of new diagnoses. It is quite clear that overdiagnosis and the incredible spread of neck ultrasound using thyroid nodule detection as well as fine-needle aspiration of a nodule of less than centimeter in dimension justifies this enormous number of new thyroid cancer diagnoses we have to manage daily. It is strongly evident that, usually, DTCs carry very good prognosis (10-year survival rate more than 90%) with a low rate of death, whereas, by contrast, persistent or recurrent disease is more common than the others. Furthermore, the 8th edition of the American Committee on Cancer and Union Internationale Contre le Cancer (AJCC/UICC) reviewed the DTC staging system: a larger part of tumors are now downstage to I or II because of the absence of distant metastases, even if it is smaller than 4 cm associated with microscopic extension to perithyroidal soft tissues and, in the case of lymph-node metastases, in the central and lateral compartments [4] . This new consideration leads to the identification of a small proportion of DTC patients, approximately 5-10%, who are at risk of death because of their cancer and their stage (usually III or IV) [5] . After these considerations, it is understandable that the recent guidelines push towards a new therapeutic approach to DTCs with low/intermediate risk. The previous almost paradigmatic indication of an absolute, complete, and more aggressive approach pressed physicians and endocrine surgeons in the past to prefer the typical "one-size-fits-all" mode and to suggest total thyroidectomy associated with central neck dissection, and radio iodine remnant ablation in the majority of patients. Presently, evidence suggests a new idea for surgery: a conservative approach for all DTCs with a preoperative low/intermediate risk, no evidence of lymph-node metastasis or other signs of aggressive presentation of the hilum and no other conditions that upgrade risk. The risk of thyroid cancer recurrence is common and moderately both in low and intermediate DTCs, but it is not influenced by an early surgical approach [6] . It is evaluated by international database reports and clarified in the literature that the recurrence rate between hemithyroidectomy and total thyroidectomy is similar and seems not to affect prognosis [7] . Moreover, a new surgical operation in the case of contralateral recurrence does not impact survival [8] . Even if the American and Italian guidelines are definitive towards this new concept of conservative and repeatable surgery, daily routines involving physicians and surgeons do not yet follow that line. Overdiagnosis and possible overtreatment is still prevalent in real-life cohorts in Italy, and no significant changes have been recorded in recent years. The rate of lobectomies is growing, but the procedure still represents a minority of all performed surgeries [9] [10] [11] [12] . However, such an approach needs a solid multidisciplinary group to decide and propose strategy, to manage follow-up and establish new indications for treatment. Patients need to be well identified, all clinical features must be known and analyzed, and surgical approaches must be well explained and accepted by patients. Moreover, a wider knowledge of minimally invasive surgical techniques for thyroid diseases needs to be massively widespread, as well as the possibility for patients to refer to an endocrine center performing such surgery. Actual surgery for low and intermediate DTCs must be well fitted for every patient. In our experience, according to the guidelines and in contrast with the Italian trends, we are constantly contributing to an increased number of hemithyroidectomy performed for DTCs, which in recent months represented about 20% of all interventions for thyroid disease, compared to 5% in the last decade, with a large number of patients at follow-up stage. In this group, thyroidectomy was necessary in about 25% of cases because of evidence at final histology of extensive disease in contrast with preoperative features (histological variant, extra thyroidal disease, and/or multifocality and/or lymph-node metastases). We have a time constraint for follow-up, and a small number of cases require total thyroidectomy to produce dynamic and statistical evidence, so we are confident that a larger number of colleagues will follow this approach to implement and strengthen this guideline consensus. American Thyroid Association Management Guidelines for Adult Patients with Thyroid Nodules and Differentiated Thyroid Cancer: The American Thyroid Association Guidelines Task Force on Thyroid Nodules and Differentiated Thyroid Cancer Italian consensus on diagnosis and treatment of differentiated thyroid cancer: Joint statements of six Italian societies Follow-up of differentiated thyroid cancer-what should (and what should not) be done AJCC Cancer Staging Form Supplement AJCC Cancer Staging Manual Updated American joint committee on cancer/tumor-node-metastasis staging system for differentiated and anaplastic thyroid cancer Extent of surgery did not affect recurrence during 7-years follow-up in papillary thyroid cancer sized 1-4 cm: Preliminary results An update on the management of low-risk differentiated thyroid cancer Lobectomy in patients with differentiated thyroid cancer: Indications and follow-up Are Evidence-Based Guidelines Reflected in Clinical Practice? An Analysis of Prospectively Collected Data of the Italian Thyroid Cancer Observatory Real-World Performance of the American Thyroid Association Risk Estimates in Predicting 1-Year Differentiated Thyroid Cancer Outcomes: A Prospective Multicenter Study of Radioguided thyroidectomy for follicular tumors: Multicentric experience The THYCOVIT (Thyroid Surgery during COVID-19 pandemic in Italy) study: Results from a nationwide, multicentric, case-controlled study Author Contributions: Conceptualization, C.P.L., R.P., L.D., G.C. and A.D.; writing-original draft preparation C.P.L. and A.D.; writing-review and editing, R.P. and G.C.; supervision, L.D. and G.C. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript. The authors declare no conflict of interest.