ObjectiveTo investigate the diagnosis and treatment of primary thyroid lymphoma.MethodThrough reading of relevant literatures at home and abroad in recent years, the diagnosis and treatment progress of primary thyroid lymphoma were summarized.ResultsThe pathogenesis of primary thyroid lymphoma was associated with chronic inflammatory stimuli such as Hashimoto’s thyroiditis. Its preoperative diagnosis mainly relied on ultrasound-guided biopsy. The treatment depended mainly on its pathological type and tumor stage. Surgical resection was mainly used for pathological biopsy and relieving compression symptoms, and radiotherapy and chemotherapy were the main treatments.ConclusionsPrimary thyroid lymphoma is a rare thyroid malignancy. Being familiar with and understands its clinicopathological features have important guiding significance for preoperative diagnosis, clearing pathological type and staging, and selection of reasonable treatment measures.
Objective To explore the association between cystatin C (CysC) and Hashimoto thyroiditis (HT), and to clarify the potential role of CysC in HT. Methods The newly diagnosed HT patients admitted to the Affiliated Hospital of Jiangsu University between January 2022 and December 2023 were selected as HT group and the same number of healthy physical examinees were selected as control group. The serum CysC levels of the two groups were compared. Subsequently, Mendelian randomization (MR) method (inverse variance weighted) was used to explore the association between CysC and HT. Results A total of 30 HT group patients and 30 healthy people were included. There was no significant difference in age and female proportion between HT group and control group (P>0.05). The serum CysC level in the HT group was higher than that in the control group [(0.91±0.16) vs. (0.79±0.11) mg/L, P<0.05]. MR analysis showed that higher serum CysC level would increase the risk of HT (P<0.05). The results of reverse MR analysis showed that there was no causal relationship between HT as an exposure factor and CysC as an outcome (P>0.05). ConclusionClinical serological test results and MR analysis suggested that CysC may play an important role in the pathogenesis of HT.
Objective To summarize the progress of research about the relationship between papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) and Hashimoto’s thyroiditis (HT). Method The relevant literatures at home and abroad in recent years about this topic were collected and analyzed. Results Comprehensive literature reviewed, combined with the author's clinical research results, PTC and HT were indeed closely related, or there was a certain causal link. HT and PTC might both come from the same embryonic stem cells. HT was an autoimmune thyroid disease caused by abnormal immune response, and might be a triggering factor of PTC. Meanwhile, lymphocyte infiltration might play a certain protective role in anti-tumor effect. RET chromosome rearrangement, RAS point mutation and BRAF gene mutation might activate mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway, especially in PTC cases with HT in which RET chromosome rearrangement was more common. In the future, selective targeted therapy aiming at the activation of RET/RAS/BRAF/MAPK pathway was a promising treatment especially in advanced PTC cases. Conclusions The correlation between PTC and HT is not fully clarified. HT is a potential risk factor for PTC but the cases of PTC with HT have a better prognosis. More prospective studies will help to further clarify the correlation between two diseases.
Objective To summarize the diagnosis and treatment of Hashimoto thyroiditis (HT) coexistence withthyroid cancer (TC). Methods One hundred and eighty-four patients with HT treated in The Affiliated Hospital of Guiyang Medical College from Jan. 2008 to Dec. 2011 were collected, and clinical data of 32 patients with TC of them were analyzed retrospectively. Results Thirty two patients combined with TC of the 184 patients with HT, and the incidence rate was 17.4%. All of the 32 patients were treated surgically according to the principle of surgery treatment for TC. Of the 32 cases of HT coexistence with TC, 15 patients were diagnosed by preoperative fine needle aspiration cytology (FNAC), and the sensitivity of FNAC was 46.9% (15/32). Twenty seven patients were diagnosed by intraop-erative frozen section pathological examination, and the sensitivity of it was 84.4% (27/32), which was significantly higher than those of FNAC (χ2=7.563,P=0.004). Thirty patients were diagnosed as papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC), and 2 patients were diagnosed as follicular thyroid carcinoma (FTC) by postoperative paraffin section pathological exam-ination and (or) immunohistochemistry, respectively. All patients were treated with levothyroxine (L-T4) after operation,and 5 patients were treatment with 131I therapy in addition. One patient suffered convulsion, and 2 patients suffered mild hoarsenessthere after operation. Only 29 patients were followed up for 3-49 months (average 35 months), and during the followed up, there were no tumor recurrence, metastasis, and death. Conclusions The rate of preoperative diagnosis of HT coexistence with TC is low, and auxiliary examinations play an important role in diagnosis and guiding treatment. Surgery is the preferred treatment, but auxiliary therapies after surgery are indispensable too.
ObjectiveTo clarify the application value of thyroid organoids in basic research and clinical translation of thyroid diseases, analyze the key challenges currently faced, and prospect future development directions. MethodsRelevant domestic and international literatures in recent years were systematically searched. This review summarized the construction strategies of thyroid organoids, and their application progress in disease model establishment (e.g., thyroid cancer, Hashimoto thyroiditis), drug screening, and personalized treatment. ResultsThyroid organoids can highly simulate the morphological structure and gene expression profile of native thyroid tissue. In terms of disease modeling, they can accurately reproduce the pathological characteristics and immune microenvironment of thyroid diseases. In drug screening, organoids can predict the response to radioactive iodine therapy and the sensitivity to targeted drugs, with high consistency between their drug sensitivity results and clinical efficacy. In mechanism research, organoids have been successfully used to reveal the roles of abnormal mitogen-activated protein kinase/phosphatidylinositol 3 kinase-protein kinase B signaling pathways, epithelial-mesenchymal transition, ferroptosis, and immunoregulatory mechanisms in thyroid carcinogenesis and disease progression, providing experimental evidence for target identification. ConclusionsAs an in vitro model that highly simulates the in vivo environment, thyroid organoids have become an important platform for thyroid disease research. Although challenges remain in standardized construction and clinical translation, with technical optimization and research evidence accumulation, they hold broad prospects in the field of precision medicine.
Objective To summarize the relationship between IgG4 and IgG4 related thyroid diseases. Methods Domestic and international publications involving the pathological features of IgG4-related thyroid diseases and relationship with IgG4 were retrieved and reviewed. Results IgG4-related disease was a newly recognized class of chronic and systemic lymphocytes disease, which may be solitary or involving multiple body organs, as well as thyroid. The expression of IgG4 was found in leisons of Hashimoto thyroiditis, Riedel thyroiditis, and papillary thyroid carcinoma. Conclusions IgG4-related thyroid disease is a new concept of thyroiditis. The knowledge of this new disease will provide appropriate treatment for patients with thyroiditis.
Objective To explore the potential causal relationship between thyroid dysfunction and osteoporosis (OP) through bidirectional two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis to provide genetic evidence for the risk association between thyroid dysfunction and OP, and provide reference for early prevention and treatment of OP. Methods Causal relationships were estimated based on data from genome-wide association studies for hypothyroidism (n=410141), hyperthyroidism (n=460499), Hashimoto thyroiditis (n=395640), and OP (n=212778). The inverse variance weighted method was used as the main analysis method, and the other four methods were used as the supplementary analysis methods to evaluate the causal effect of thyroid dysfunction and OP. Results The results of inverse variance weighted method showed that hypothyroidism [odds ratio (OR)=1.097, 95% confidence interval (CI) (1.017, 1.183), P=0.017], hyperthyroidism [OR=1.089, 95%CI (1.000, 1.186), P=0.049] and Hashimoto thyroiditis [OR=1.190, 95%CI (1.054, 1.343), P=0.005] were positively correlated with the causal effect of OP. The results of reverse MR analysis did not support that OP would increase the risk of hypothyroidism, hyperthyroidism or Hashimoto thyroiditis (P>0.05). In the bidirectional MR analyses, there was no heterogeneity in Cochran Q detection, MR-Egger intercept test results showed that there was no horizontal pleotropy, and the leave-one-out method analysis results showed that the MR analysis results were reliable. Conclusion Hypothyroidism, hyperthyroidism, and Hashimoto thyroiditis increase the risk of OP, while OP is not found to increase the risk of thyroid dysfunction in reverse studies.
ObjectiveTo summarize the characteristics of cervical lymph node metastasis (LNM) in the papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) coexisting with Hashimoto thyroiditis (HT). MethodThe literatures related to cervical LNM of PTC coexisting with HT in recent years were collected and summarized. ResultsCompared with the PTC patients without HT, the more enlarged lymph nodes could be detected, and the cervival central LNM rate was lower, but there was still controversy about cervival lateral LNM in the patients with PTC coexisting with HT. The male, young, large tumor diameter, extraglandular invasion, multifocal cancer, BRAF gene mutation, and higher thyroid peroxidase antibody and thyroglobulin antibody levels, as well as the ultrasound features such as thyroid nodule aspect ratio >1, extremely low echo, calcification, and lymph node calcification, liquefaction, and disappearance of hilar lymph nodes could be used to evaluate the risk factors of cervical LNM for the patients with PTC coexisting with HT. ConclusionsFrom the results of this review, it is suggests that the rate of central LNM is lower in patients with PTC coexisting with HT, but the status of LNM in the cervical lateral region remains to be explored. The relevant risk factors in combination with ultrasonic characteristics could help evaluate cervical lymph node status, could provide basis for early detection of metastatic lymph nodes and the formulation of individualized surgical plans, and improve the prognosis of patients.
ObjectivesTo systematically review the efficacy of Bailing capsule for autoimmune antibodies in Hashimoto thyroiditis (HT).MethodsPubMed, EMbase, The Cochrane Library, CBM, WanFang Data and CNKI databases were electronically searched to collect the randomized controlled trials (RCTs) on Bailing capsule in treatment of HT from inception to January 2019. Two reviewers independently screened literature, extracted data and assessed the risk of bias of included studies, then, meta-analysis was performed by using RevMan 5.3 software.ResultsA total of 7 RCTs involving 428 patients were included. The results of meta-analysis showed that the changes of TGAb and TPOAb in Bailing capsule combined with Euthyrox group were higher than that in control group (MD=?228.91, 95%CI ?398.61 to ?59.20, P=0.008; MD=?158.19, 95%CI ?222.44 to ?93.94, P<0.000 01); the changes of TGAb and TPOAb in Bailing capsule combined with Iodine modification diet group were higher than that in control group(MD=?499.27, 95%CI ?540.39 to ?458.15, P<0.000 01; MD=?407.37, 95%CI ?448.60 to ?366.14, P<0.000 01).ConclusionsCurrent evidence shows that Bailing capsule combined with other therapies can decrease the levels of TGAb and TPOAb in HT patients. Due to limited quality and quantity of the included studies, more high-quality studies are required to verify the above conclusion.
Objective
To compare differences of characteristics of ultrasonic elasticity imaging for benign and malignant small thyroid nodules with or without Hashimoto thyroiditis (HT).
Methods
The thyroid nodules with ≤1 cm size and the category 4A, 4B, 4C, and 5 of Thyroid Imaging Reporting and Data System (TI-RADS) were included into this study, and a further examination of real-time elastography was performed. The final diagnosis was relied on the pathological diagnosis. The elasticity score and strain ratio (SR) were recorded and compared between these two groups, respectively.
Results
Of the 424 nodules, 103 nodules were accompanied with HT (thyroid nodule with HT group), 321 nodules were not accompanied with HT (thyroid nodule without HT group). In the thyroid nodule with HT group, the area under the receiver operator characteristic (ROC) curve (AUCs) of the elasticity score and the SR was 0.685 and 0.676, respectively; the optimal cut offs of the elasticity score and the SR was 3 points and 2.45 respectively, their corresponding sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy was 75.7%, 57.6%, 68.0% and 75.7%, 60.6%, 67.6%, respectively. In the thyroid nodule without HT group, the AUCs of the elasticity score and the SR was 0.692 and 0.692, respectively; the optimal cut offs of the elasticity score and the SR was 4 points and 2.84, respectively; their corresponding sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy was 57.5%, 74.2%, 69.2% and 76.1%, 59.7%, 67.7%, respectively.
Conclusions
Elastography is helpful in differential diagnosis of benign and malignant small thyroid nodules. While, standards of elasticity score and SR value in differential diagnosis are different between benign and malignant small thyroid nodules with HT and without HT, elasticity score and SR ratio decrease in benign and malignant small thyroid nodules with HT.