Relationship between prognosis of papillary thyroid carcinoma patient and age: A retrospective single-institution study

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Abstract

Age is an important prognostic factor in papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC). In this study, we investigated the difference in prognosis of 7 subsets of PTC patients without distant metastasis at presentation or a history of radiation exposure (20 years or younger, 21-30 years, 31-40 years, 41-50 years, 51-60 years, 61-70 years, and older than 70 years). The lymph node recurrence rate was high in patients 20 years or younger and those older than 60 years. Distant recurrence and carcinoma death rates signifcantly elevated in patients older than 60 years. The incidence of signifcant extrathyroid extension markedly increased with age, although that of large node metastasis or extranodal tumor extension did not differ much among the 7 subsets. With the Kaplan-Meier method, lymph node recurrence rate was poor in patients 20 years or younger and in those older than 60 years. Poor distant recurrence-free and cause specifc survivals of patients older than 60 years were identifed in the series of PTC patients with and without these aggressive features. It is therefore suggested that 1) Lymph node recurrence rate was high in patients 20 years or younger and those older than 60 years and 2) prognosis, including distant recurrence-free survival and cause-specifc survival, of patients older than 60 years was poor regardless of clinicopathological features of PTC at initial surgery. © The Japan Endocrine Society.

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Ito, Y., Miyauchi, A., Kihara, M., Takamura, Y., Kobayashi, K., & Miya, A. (2012). Relationship between prognosis of papillary thyroid carcinoma patient and age: A retrospective single-institution study. Endocrine Journal, 59(5), 399–405. https://doi.org/10.1507/endocrj.EJ12-0044

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