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Acknowledging gray areas: 2015 vs. 2009 American Thyroid Association differentiated thyroid cancer guidelines on ablating putatively low-intermediate-risk patients.

TitleAcknowledging gray areas: 2015 vs. 2009 American Thyroid Association differentiated thyroid cancer guidelines on ablating putatively low-intermediate-risk patients.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2017
AuthorsFrangos, S., Iakovou I. P., Marlowe R. J., Eftychiou N., Patsali L., Vanezi A., Savva A., Mpalaris V., & Giannoula E. I.
JournalEur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging
Volume44
Issue2
Pagination185-189
Date Published2017 Feb
ISSN1619-7089
KeywordsAdult, Combined Modality Therapy, Female, Greece, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm, Residual, Nuclear Medicine, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Radiotherapy, Risk Factors, Thyroid Neoplasms, Thyroidectomy, Treatment Outcome
Abstract

PURPOSE: Typically formulated by investigators from "world centres of excellence," differentiated thyroid carcinoma (DTC) management guidelines may have more limited applicability in settings of less expert care and fewer resources. Arguably the world's leading DTC guidelines are those of the American Thyroid Association, revised in 2009 ("ATA 2009") and 2015 ("ATA 2015"). To further explore the issue of "real-world applicability" of DTC guidelines, we retrospectively compared indications for ablation using ATA 2015 versus ATA 2009 in a two-centre cohort of ablated T1-2, M0 DTC patients (N = 336). Based on TNM status and histology, these patients were low-intermediate risk, but many ultimately had other characteristics suggesting elevated or uncertain risk.METHODS: Working by consensus, two experienced nuclear medicine physicians considered patient and treatment characteristics to classify each case as having "no indication," a "possible indication," or a "clear indication" for ablation according to ATA 2009 or ATA 2015. The physicians also identified reasons for classification changes between ATA 2015 versus ATA 2009. Classification was unblinded, but the physicians had cared for only 138/336 patients, and the charts encompassed September 2010-October 2013, several years before the classification was performed.RESULTS: One hundred of 336 patients (29.8 %) changed classification regarding indication for ablation using ATA 2015 versus ATA 2009. Most reclassified patients (70/100) moved from "no indication" or "clear indication" to "possible indication." Reflecting this phenomenon, "possible indication" became the largest category according to the ATA 2015 classification (141/336, 42.0 %, versus 96/336, 28.6 %, according to ATA 2009). Many reclassifications were attributable to multiple clinicopathological characteristics, most commonly, stimulated thyroglobulin or anti-thyroglobulin antibody levels, multifocality, bilateral involvement, or capsular/nodal invasion.CONCLUSIONS: Regarding indications for ablation, ATA 2015 appears to better "acknowledge grey areas," i.e., patients with ambiguous or unavailable data requiring individualised, nuanced decision-making, than does ATA 2009.

DOI10.1007/s00259-016-3495-1
Alternate JournalEur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging
PubMed ID27557846

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