Thyroid cancer is an abnormal, invasive (malignant) growth of cells in the thyroid gland. The thyroid gland is a small gland at the lower front of the neck. It makes hormones that control your metabolism (the process of turning the food you eat into energy).
The cause of most thyroid cancers is not known. However, as many as 1 in 10 cases of thyroid cancer are caused by radiation exposure. Examples of 2 ways that radiation exposure could increase your risk of this cancer are:
Also, you may have an increased risk if you have a family history of a type of thyroid cancer called medullary cancer or a history of a hormone problem that causes high blood levels of calcium (parathyroid adenoma). Tell your healthcare provider if you think this may apply to you or a member of your family.
Early thyroid cancer does not cause symptoms. As the cancer grows, the first symptom is a lump (nodule) in the front of the neck.
Late symptoms of thyroid cancer are:
These symptoms do not always mean thyroid cancer. Most growths or lumps in the thyroid gland are benign; that is, not malignant. Other problems such as an infection could cause similar symptoms. If you have these symptoms, you should see your healthcare provider as soon as possible to diagnose the problem.
Your healthcare provider will ask about your symptoms and your personal and family medical history. Your provider will examine you. You may also have one or more of the following tests:
A biopsy is the only sure way to know whether a thyroid nodule is cancerous. Your provider may be able to remove tissue in the office with a needle biopsy, also called needle aspiration. Or you may need to have your lump completely removed with surgery in the operating room. The tissue removed with either of these procedures is then examined in the lab for cancer cells.
There are 4 main types of thyroid cancer. The type of cancer is determined by looking at tissue samples under a microscope. Some types of thyroid cancer grow faster than others. The 4 types are:
Papillary and follicular cancers are called well-differentiated cancers and are the most common. Medullary thyroid cancer may be hereditary. Anaplastic thyroid cancer is the most malignant type, but fortunately it is the least common.
The treatment depends on the type of thyroid cancer, whether it is in the thyroid gland only or has spread to other parts of the body--that is, the stage of the cancer--and your age and overall health. One or more of the following treatments may be used:
Surgery is the most common treatment. Part or all of the thyroid gland may be removed, as well as any lymph nodes in the area that have cancer.
Radiation therapy for thyroid cancer may be done in different ways. For the common types of thyroid cancer, usually radioactive iodine is given by mouth. Because the thyroid gland takes up iodine, the radioactive iodine collects in thyroid tissue and kills the cancer cells and any thyroid tissue remaining after surgery. Sometimes a radiation machine outside the body may be used to send high-energy X-rays to the neck to treat certain types of cancer. This is called external radiation therapy.
Thyroid hormones can be used to stop the body from making another hormone that stimulates the thyroid gland (thyroid stimulating hormone). This can help prevent thyroid cancer cells from growing. Thyroid hormones are usually given as pills.
Chemotherapy may be taken by pill, or it may be put into your body by a needle in a vein or muscle. Chemotherapy drugs go into the bloodstream and travel through the body. This allows the drugs to kill cancer cells outside the thyroid gland.
The chance of recovery depends on the type and stage of cancer, as well as your age and overall health.
If part or all of your thyroid gland is removed, you will usually need to take thyroid hormone pills after the surgery. The thyroid medicine will replace the natural hormone that was made by the thyroid gland and prevent any remaining thyroid tissue from functioning.
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Healthcare providers do not know how to prevent most types of thyroid cancer because they do not fully understand what causes it. However, scientists have found that the medullary type of thyroid cancer can be caused by a change in a gene called RET. This changed gene can be passed from parent to child. Nearly everyone with the altered RET gene will develop medullary thyroid cancer. If the changed RET gene is found in a member of your family, your provider may suggest that other family members have blood tests for the gene. For people who carry the altered RET gene, frequent lab tests or surgery to remove the thyroid gland before cancer develops may be recommended.