Australian males and females have similar rates of presentation for symptomatic and advanced thyroid cancer: Retrospective analysis of the Australian New Zealand Thyroid Cancer Registry.
1/5 보강
PICO 자동 추출 (휴리스틱, conf 2/4)
유사 논문P · Population 대상 환자/모집단
1082 patients with differentiated thyroid cancer, 32% of males and 38% of females presented with symptomatic thyroid disease (p = 0.
I · Intervention 중재 / 시술
추출되지 않음
C · Comparison 대조 / 비교
추출되지 않음
O · Outcome 결과 / 결론
[DISCUSSION] Symptomatic presentation was similar between males and females, but symptomatic presentation was associated with larger cancers. [CONCLUSION] This study highlights comparable rates of symptomatic detection between males and females with DTCs and symptomatic presentations were responsible for less than 40% of presentations.
[INTRODUCTION] Thyroid cancer is more commonly diagnosed in females, however recent research has challenged whether this finding is due to a true difference in biology or rates of diagnosis, with conc
- 표본수 (n) 70
- p-value p = 0.06
- p-value p < 0.001
- OR 1.62
APA
Tong CW, Bhimani N, et al. (2024). Australian males and females have similar rates of presentation for symptomatic and advanced thyroid cancer: Retrospective analysis of the Australian New Zealand Thyroid Cancer Registry.. World journal of surgery, 48(12), 2934-2940. https://doi.org/10.1002/wjs.12373
MLA
Tong CW, et al.. "Australian males and females have similar rates of presentation for symptomatic and advanced thyroid cancer: Retrospective analysis of the Australian New Zealand Thyroid Cancer Registry.." World journal of surgery, vol. 48, no. 12, 2024, pp. 2934-2940.
PMID
39389930 ↗
Abstract 한글 요약
[INTRODUCTION] Thyroid cancer is more commonly diagnosed in females, however recent research has challenged whether this finding is due to a true difference in biology or rates of diagnosis, with concerns that over-diagnosis may be a factor in differences. The rates of symptomatic versus incidental diagnosis by males and females is not well known. This study used the Australian and New Zealand Thyroid Cancer Registry (ANZTCR) to explore whether symptomatic presentation varies between sexes.
[MATERIALS AND METHODS] Retrospective analysis on ANZTCR data between 2017 and 2022 was performed. Symptomatic cases were those with thyroid compressing symptoms, toxic goiter, Graves' disease, or abnormal laryngoscopy. Cases with asymptomatic goiter or surgeries for a thyroid nodule were classified as incidental.
[RESULTS] Among 1082 patients with differentiated thyroid cancer, 32% of males and 38% of females presented with symptomatic thyroid disease (p = 0.06). A similar rate of presentation of advanced thyroid cancer (T3/4) was seen with male and female patients (n = 70, 47% vs. n = 79, 53%). Females exhibited a higher prevalence of low-risk relapse cancers according to American Thyroid Association stratification (66.3% vs. 50.4%), whereas males exhibited a higher prevalence of high-risk relapse cancers compared to females (27.3% vs. 15.3%, p < 0.001). Regression showed symptoms were associated with more advanced T stage (OR = 1.62, p = 0.02).
[DISCUSSION] Symptomatic presentation was similar between males and females, but symptomatic presentation was associated with larger cancers.
[CONCLUSION] This study highlights comparable rates of symptomatic detection between males and females with DTCs and symptomatic presentations were responsible for less than 40% of presentations.
[MATERIALS AND METHODS] Retrospective analysis on ANZTCR data between 2017 and 2022 was performed. Symptomatic cases were those with thyroid compressing symptoms, toxic goiter, Graves' disease, or abnormal laryngoscopy. Cases with asymptomatic goiter or surgeries for a thyroid nodule were classified as incidental.
[RESULTS] Among 1082 patients with differentiated thyroid cancer, 32% of males and 38% of females presented with symptomatic thyroid disease (p = 0.06). A similar rate of presentation of advanced thyroid cancer (T3/4) was seen with male and female patients (n = 70, 47% vs. n = 79, 53%). Females exhibited a higher prevalence of low-risk relapse cancers according to American Thyroid Association stratification (66.3% vs. 50.4%), whereas males exhibited a higher prevalence of high-risk relapse cancers compared to females (27.3% vs. 15.3%, p < 0.001). Regression showed symptoms were associated with more advanced T stage (OR = 1.62, p = 0.02).
[DISCUSSION] Symptomatic presentation was similar between males and females, but symptomatic presentation was associated with larger cancers.
[CONCLUSION] This study highlights comparable rates of symptomatic detection between males and females with DTCs and symptomatic presentations were responsible for less than 40% of presentations.
🏷️ 키워드 / MeSH 📖 같은 키워드 OA만
🏷️ 같은 키워드 · 무료전문 — 이 논문 MeSH/keyword 기반
- A Phase I Study of Hydroxychloroquine and Suba-Itraconazole in Men with Biochemical Relapse of Prostate Cancer (HITMAN-PC): Dose Escalation Results.
- Self-management of male urinary symptoms: qualitative findings from a primary care trial.
- Clinical and Liquid Biomarkers of 20-Year Prostate Cancer Risk in Men Aged 45 to 70 Years.
- Diagnostic accuracy of Ga-PSMA PET/CT versus multiparametric MRI for preoperative pelvic invasion in the patients with prostate cancer.
- Comprehensive analysis of androgen receptor splice variant target gene expression in prostate cancer.
- Clinical Presentation and Outcomes of Patients Undergoing Surgery for Thyroid Cancer.