Treatment Of Thyroid Cancer
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[edit] Treatment Of Thyroid Cancer
A) Surgery: Generally speaking, like with many other cancers the physician will likely suggest that the thyroid cancer should be surgically removed. We want all of the cancer cells removed, if possible. If this is not possible, then we want as much removed as possible. There might be an exception as in the radiation induced papillary thyroid cancer. This thyroid cancer usually has a benign course and cancer survival is not better with surgery as it is without surgery.
B) Radiation: In the case of radiation induced thyroid cancer the doctor might recommend a radiotherapy treatment by intravenous radioactive Iodine in a therapeutic dose. This would then be followed by thyroid suppression therapy, which will suppress TSH production in the pituitary gland and thereby will take away the tumor causing effect of TSH.
C) Thyroid suppression therapy: This is done by finding a maintenance dose of thyroxin (Synthroid, Eltroxin etc.), which has to be taken for the rest of the patient's life. In the regular thyroid cancer treated by surgery, this lifelong TSH suppression therapy with thyroid hormone will also have to be done to improve long-term survival.
D) Chemotherapy is used for the tumors that do not respond to conventional means (surgery, radiotherapy, TSH suppression therapy). However, the results with cisplatin, bleomycin and doxorubicin and melphalan are not encouraging.
A good response rate would be, if 20 to 30% of people treated show improvement. Unfortunately, these patients who would be in need of chemotherapy are the ones who likely have already developed resistant cancer cell clones and would be much more difficult to treat successfully than the ones who responded to the other measures mentioned above. It is up to the oncologist at the Cancer Treatment Center what combination to choose for the thyroid cancer. This judgement takes a lot of experience, literature knowledge and being in touch with the latest developments in the particular type of cancer that is being treated. Most of all the oncologist can only do the best work, if the patient seeks his/her advice early. There is no substitute for early diagnosis and treatment.
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References:
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