Cancer Takes Aim At Thyroid
USA Today
August 17, 2009
A medical mystery: As overall cancer rates fall, why are thyroid cancer rates rising? Diagnoses of cancer in this gland in the neck are increasing about 6% a year, faster than cancers found anywhere else, according to one National Cancer Institute analysis.
Researchers know one big reason: The many medical scans Americans have, for everything from neck pain to artery plaque, are turning up thousands of tiny thyroid tumors that otherwise might go undetected and often would do no harm.
"We call them 'incidentalomas,' " says Amy Chen, a head and neck surgeon at Emory University in Atlanta and American Cancer Society researcher.
But that's not the whole story. Two recent studies, including one co-written by Chen, show larger thyroid tumors are being found at an increasing rate, too. And those can't be explained by more aggressive diagnosis alone, researchers say.
"There is something else going on" to contribute to the 37,000 cases of thyroid cancer expected this year, Chen says. That's up from 18,000 in 2000.
What is that "something else"? In-depth research on that is just starting, says Elaine Ron, a senior investigator at the cancer institute. The good news, she says, is that 98% of those with the most common forms of the cancer live at least five years. Overall death rates are not rising. But it's important to study the rise in cases, she says: "This is a large increase, and it's been going on for a long time. If there's a biological reason, we can try to prevent it."
Among factors researchers are considering:
*Radiation: Researchers know radiation exposure, especially in childhood, can increase thyroid cancer risk. They don't know whether increased radiation exposure from medical scans and other sources is contributing to the overall increase.
*Obesity: Some early studies suggest it might be a factor -- and researchers know it's increasing.
*Diet: Some studies suggest diets low in fruits and vegetables or with iodine levels that are too high or too low might play roles.
Watching the research: Caroline Stetler of Washington, D.C. Stetler, 28, had thyroid cancer at 16. As a grad student at American University's Investigative Reporting Workshop, she researched the cancer and was shocked by the numbers.
"When I was diagnosed, the only question the doctor asked was, 'Were you ever exposed to head or neck radiation?' And the answer to that was no," she says. If environmental or lifestyle changes are contributing to the increase in thyroid cancer cases, "we have an obligation to find out," says Stetler, who contributed to a report on the mystery (investigativereportingworkshop.org).
Researchers also need to learn which small thyroid cancers could safely be left untreated, says Louise Davies, a researcher at the Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center in White River Junction, Vt. She says there's no question some patients are undergoing unneeded biopsies, thyroid removal surgeries and radiation.
But which patients? Right now, doctors don't have good ways to tell. And they know even tiny tumors sometimes spread and cause serious problems, says Kenneth Burman, president of the American Thyroid Association and chief of endocrinology at Washington Hospital Center. The association says doctors may monitor some tumors less than 1 centimeter wide but should immediately treat anything bigger.
You may have thyroid cancer if...
Anyone with these possible signs or symptoms of thyroid cancer should see a doctor, says the American Cancer Society:
*A lump or swelling in the neck, sometimes growing rapidly.
*Pain in the front of the neck, sometimes going up to the ears.
*Hoarseness or other voice changes that do not go away.
*Trouble swallowing.
*Breathing problems (feeling like you are "breathing through a straw").
*A cough that continues and is not a cold.
(c) USA TODAY
1 comment:
Hi there! So glad I came across your blog. I love how you're opening up and sharing your thyroid cancer journey with everyone. It is sooo important and so great of you. I actually work and write for a website that's also devoted to thyroid health, www.dearthyroid.com. We write letters to our thyroids (or lack thereof) for catharsis. We welcome all kinds of thyroid disease and thyroid cancer, even those who've had thyroidectomies. We'd love for you to stop by and tell us what you think!
Thanks again for your blog!
Liz
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