Types Of Thyroid Cancer
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Types Of Thyroid Cancer
It is important for the cancer specialist to distinguish between the four separate histological subtypes of thyroid cancer as the growth patterns are different. Also, the responses to various therapeutic modalities is quite different depending on what histological type is found in the patient. The biopsy is sent to the pathologist and usually one of the following types of thyroid cancers is diagnosed.
Papillary Thyroid Cancer
This is the most common thyroid tumor found at the time of surgical removal. About 75% are of this histological type, which is medically also known as papillary thyroid adenocarcinoma. It is usually associated with a less invasive, slower growth behavior, in other words persons affected with such a tumor can almost experience a normal life expectancy.
The majority of this type (90%) are variants with a good prognosis. They are the micropapillary, encapsulated, solid and follicular variants. The 5 year survival of this group is 95%, the 10 year survival is 85%. However, an important other 10% of this group is associated with a poor prognosis and they are the tall cell, the columnar cell and the diffuse sclerosing types. It is these variants, which are often found in the older population. They are more invasive and form metastases by invading neighboring areas, which contain a lot of blood vessels. They metastasize into the lungs and bone thus leading to premature death.
Follicular Cancer
This type of thyroid cancer has a worse survival than the papillary thyroid cancer. About 15% of all cases have this appearance under the microscope. The 5 Year survival with optimal treatment is 80%, the 10 year survival is 65%.
Medullary Thyroid Cancer
About 5% of all thyroid cancers are of this type. This is a special type of tumor as it is a tumor of the C type cells of the thyroid, which produces the hormone calcitonin. Often this type of tumor is associated with a familial genetic type of thyroid cancer. The cure rate is usually good, provided it is found early on in the disease and treated appropriately. 10 year survival used to be 50%, but with early diagnosis and aggressive therapy can be as good as 80 to 90%.
Anaplastic Thyroid Cancer
The remaining 5% of all thyroid cancers belong to this immature cell type cancer. It is a very fast growing cancer, which spreads early on to other organs. The survival rates are dismal with overall survival rates of only 7 months to at the most 2 years from the beginning of the diagnosis. About 35% of these cancers develop out of a papillary thyroid cancer in the elderly, which may be a clone of resistant cancer cells that eventually kill the patient.
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