Dissection of RET p.M918T-driven progression of hereditary vs. sporadic medullary thyroid cancer.
[BACKGROUND] Whether inherited in the context of multiple endocrine neoplasia 2B at germline level or acquired in a lifetime, all RET p.M918T (RET c.2753T>C) mutations should activate the RET tyrosine
- 연구 설계 cross-sectional
APA
Machens A, Lorenz K, et al. (2025). Dissection of RET p.M918T-driven progression of hereditary vs. sporadic medullary thyroid cancer.. European journal of surgical oncology : the journal of the European Society of Surgical Oncology and the British Association of Surgical Oncology, 51(3), 109549. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejso.2024.109549
MLA
Machens A, et al.. "Dissection of RET p.M918T-driven progression of hereditary vs. sporadic medullary thyroid cancer.." European journal of surgical oncology : the journal of the European Society of Surgical Oncology and the British Association of Surgical Oncology, vol. 51, no. 3, 2025, pp. 109549.
PMID
39705856
Abstract
[BACKGROUND] Whether inherited in the context of multiple endocrine neoplasia 2B at germline level or acquired in a lifetime, all RET p.M918T (RET c.2753T>C) mutations should activate the RET tyrosine kinase receptor alike, with similar degrees of medullary thyroid cancer (MTC) progression when disparities in disease onset and multifocal growth are accounted for.
[METHODS] This cross-sectional analysis of RET p.M918T-driven progression of hereditary MTC (33 patients) vs. sporadic MTC (36 patients) sought to explore this hypothesis.
[RESULTS] Patients with hereditary disease were significantly younger at thyroidectomy (medians of 10 vs. 57 yrs.) and featured significantly more often multifocal growth (69 vs. 14 %) with more thyroid tumor foci (medians of 2 foci vs. 1 focus) than patients with sporadic disease. Although the former had 3.6-fold smaller primary thyroid tumor diameters (medians of 5 vs. 18 mm) and twice as many neck nodes dissected (medians of 66.5 vs. 32 nodes) than the latter, extrathyroid tumor extension (42 vs. 36 %), node metastasis (64 vs. 77 %), distant metastasis (33 vs. 17 %), and biochemical cure rates (45 vs. 35 %) were fairly comparable, as was the number of dissected node metastases (medians of 7 vs. 8 involved nodes). Sensitivity analyses, with breakdown of patients by tumor multifocality and nodal status, corroborated these findings.
[CONCLUSION] RET p.M918T-driven progression of MTC is similar in hereditary and sporadic disease, barring earlier development and more frequent multifocal growth of hereditary MTC. This makes a compelling case for referral of patients with RET p.M918T-driven MTCs to specialist surgical centers.
[METHODS] This cross-sectional analysis of RET p.M918T-driven progression of hereditary MTC (33 patients) vs. sporadic MTC (36 patients) sought to explore this hypothesis.
[RESULTS] Patients with hereditary disease were significantly younger at thyroidectomy (medians of 10 vs. 57 yrs.) and featured significantly more often multifocal growth (69 vs. 14 %) with more thyroid tumor foci (medians of 2 foci vs. 1 focus) than patients with sporadic disease. Although the former had 3.6-fold smaller primary thyroid tumor diameters (medians of 5 vs. 18 mm) and twice as many neck nodes dissected (medians of 66.5 vs. 32 nodes) than the latter, extrathyroid tumor extension (42 vs. 36 %), node metastasis (64 vs. 77 %), distant metastasis (33 vs. 17 %), and biochemical cure rates (45 vs. 35 %) were fairly comparable, as was the number of dissected node metastases (medians of 7 vs. 8 involved nodes). Sensitivity analyses, with breakdown of patients by tumor multifocality and nodal status, corroborated these findings.
[CONCLUSION] RET p.M918T-driven progression of MTC is similar in hereditary and sporadic disease, barring earlier development and more frequent multifocal growth of hereditary MTC. This makes a compelling case for referral of patients with RET p.M918T-driven MTCs to specialist surgical centers.
MeSH Terms
Humans; Thyroid Neoplasms; Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-ret; Middle Aged; Female; Male; Adult; Disease Progression; Cross-Sectional Studies; Thyroidectomy; Carcinoma, Medullary; Carcinoma, Neuroendocrine; Aged; Adolescent; Young Adult; Child; Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia Type 2b; Neck Dissection; Germ-Line Mutation; Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia Type 2a
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- Translating the desmoplastic microenvironment of medullary thyroid cancer into surgical practice.
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- Oncological features of sporadic vs. hereditary pediatric medullary thyroid cancer.
- Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2: towards a risk-based approach integrating molecular and biomarker results.