| dc.description.abstract |
Background.Medullar thyroid cancer, rare neuroendocrine malignancy from parafollicular
C-cells, remain 1–5% of thyroid cancers. early metastasis association with hereditary
syndromes like MEN 2A/2B and resistance to conventional therapies pose diagnostic and
therapeutic challenges. This study focusses on these challenges.
Objective(s). To assess medullary thyroid cancer's current diagnostic methods and
therapeutic approaches, with an emphasis on imaging, biomarkers, and treatment
Results. To find efficient treatment methods for MTC.
Materials and methods. A literature review analyzed 30 peer-reviewed studies (2000–
2024) from PubMed, PMC, and the American Thyroid Association, focusing on MTC diagnosis
(USG, PET/CT, calcitonin screening) and treatment (surgery, targeted therapies). Diagnostic
accuracy, sensitivity, and treatment outcomes, including survival rates and biochemical
cure, were assessed.
Results. USG detects MTC nodules and lymph node metastases with 85–90% sensitivity, but
specificity requires fine-needle aspiration. Serum calcitonin and CEA are sensitive
biomarkers, with calcitonin doubling time predicting progression. 18F-DOPA-PET/CT and
gadoxetic acid-enhanced MRI improve metastasis detection. Total thyroidectomy with neck
dissection achieves biochemical cure in 60–70% of early-stage cases. In metastatic MTC,
vandetanib and cabozantinib extend progression-free survival by 11–14 months.
Selpercatinib, for RET-mutated MTC, shows a 70% response rate. Radiotherapy reduces
local recurrence by 50% in unresectable cases.
Conclusion(s). Advances in calcitonin screening, RET testing, and imaging enhance MTC
diagnosis, enabling early intervention. Surgery remains curative, while tyrosine kinase
inhibitors improve outcomes in metastatic disease. Future research must refine imaging for
micrometastases address resistance to targeted therapies. |
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