AI Article Synopsis

  • A study conducted on young residents of Fukushima Prefecture following the 2011 nuclear accident revealed a high incidence of papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) but found no significant changes in tumor characteristics or invasiveness over time.
  • The research analyzed histological specimens from 115 patients aged 18 or younger, comparing those treated shortly after the accident to those treated later, and included various age subgroups.
  • Findings indicated that while there was a notable decline in intrathyroid spread with increasing age, the lack of significant differences in tumor morphology suggests both early and late-onset PTCs share a common cause, unrelated to low radiation exposure.

Article Abstract

Thyroid ultrasound screening of young residents in Fukushima Prefecture, Japan, showed a high detection rate of papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC). Detailed morphological analysis of these tumors was not presented to date. This study sets out to evaluate changes in histopathological and invasive characteristics of Fukushima PTC with time after the nuclear accident of March 2011 in all available cases and in different age subgroups. Histological specimens of 115 PTCs from patients aged 18 years or younger at the time of the Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plant accident, who underwent surgical resection at Fukushima Medical University during 2012-2016, were reviewed. Patients were divided into those treated during the first 4 years after the accident (n = 78, shorter-onset) or later (n = 37, longer-onset). The whole group and 3 age subgroups: children (aged less than 15 years), adolescents (aged from 15 to less than 19 years), and young adults (aged from 19 years) at surgery were analyzed. No statistically significant time-related changes in tumor structure or invasiveness were found in the whole group or in age-matched subgroups. Statistically significant age-related downtrend was observed for intrathyroid spread in the whole group of patients. The absence of temporal changes in tumor morphological characteristics and tumor invasiveness strongly suggests common etiology of the shorter- and longer-onset Fukushima PTCs, which are unlikely related to the effect of exposure to very low doses of radiation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6361578PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cas.13912DOI Listing

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