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[30 years of prophylactic thyroidectomy for hereditary medullary thyroid cancer : A milestone in translational medicine]. | LitMetric

[30 years of prophylactic thyroidectomy for hereditary medullary thyroid cancer : A milestone in translational medicine].

Chirurgie (Heidelb)

Klinik für Viszeral‑, Gefäss- und Endokrine Chirurgie, Universitätsmedizin Halle, Ernst Grube Str. 40, 06097, Halle (Saale), Deutschland.

Published: August 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • * The discovery of RET mutations led to the recommendation of preventive thyroid surgery for individuals with the mutation, changing how doctors approach treatment and risk management of MTC.
  • * Monitoring calcitonin levels has become essential in assessing cancer risk and timing of surgery, making hereditary MTC more manageable and showing progress in medical research that benefits patients.

Article Abstract

Medullary thyroid cancer (MTC) is the most frequent manifestation of multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2 (MEN2) that determines the oncological outcome. Germline mutations in the rearranged during transfection (RET) protooncogene, a tumor suppressor gene on chromosome 10q11.2, were identified 30 years ago as the genetic basis of MEN2 and published in 1993 and 1994. These seminal findings gave rise to the concept of prophylactic thyroidectomy for asymptomatic gene mutation carriers based on a positive RET gene test, which has become the standard of care ever since. Clinical genetic investigations showed genotype-phenotype correlations with respect to the individual gene mutation regarding the penetrance and onset of MTC and to a lesser extent also with respect to the other components of MEN2, pheochromocytoma and primary hyperparathyroidism. From this a clinically relevant risk stratification could be derived. Initially, the optimal timing of prophylactic thyroidectomy was primarily based on the RET genotype alone, which was not sufficient for a precise age recommendation and subsequently required additional consideration of calcitonin serum levels for fine tuning. Calcitonin levels first show the risk of lymph node metastasis when they exceed the upper normal limit of the assay independent of carrier age and RET mutation. Routine calcitonin screening of patients with nodular thyroid disease, screening of families on identification of MEN2 index patients, and pre-emptive thyroidectomy in carriers of gene mutations with normal calcitonin levels have led to the fact that nowadays, 30 years after the first description of the gene mutations causing the disease, the life-threatening hereditary MTC has become curable: a shining example for the success of translational transnational medical research for the benefit of patients.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11286710PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00104-024-02105-xDOI Listing

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