Primary high-grade non-anaplastic thyroid carcinoma: A retrospective study of 364 cases Journal Article


Authors: Xu, B.; David, J.; Dogan, S.; Landa, I.; Katabi, N.; Saliba, M.; Khimraj, A.; Sherman, E. J.; Tuttle, R. M.; Tallini, G.; Ganly, I.; Fagin, J. A.; Ghossein, R. A.
Article Title: Primary high-grade non-anaplastic thyroid carcinoma: A retrospective study of 364 cases
Abstract: Aims: We aimed to study the clinicopathological and molecular features of high-grade non-anaplastic thyroid carcinomas (HGTCs), a carcinoma with a prognosis intermediate between those of well-differentiated carcinoma and anaplastic carcinoma. Methods and results: This study included 364 HGTC patients: 200 patients (54.9%) were diagnosed with poorly differentiated thyroid carcinoma (PDTC), based on the Turin consensus (HGTC-PDTC), and 164 were diagnosed with high-grade features that did not meet the Turin criteria (HGTC-nonPDTC). HGTCs are aggressive: the 3-year, 5-year, 10-year and 20-year disease-specific survival (DSS) rates were 89%, 76%, 60%, and 35%, respectively. Although DSS was similar between HGTC-PDTC and HGTC-nonPDTC patients, HGTC-PDTC was associated with higher rate of radioactive iodine avidity, a higher frequency of RAS mutations, a lower frequency of BRAF V600E mutations and a higher propensity for distant metastasis (DM) than HGTC-nonPDTC. Independent clinicopathological markers of worse outcome were: older age, male sex, extensive necrosis and lack of encapsulation for DSS; older age, male sex and vascular invasion for DM-free survival; and older age, necrosis, positive margins and lymph node metastasis for locoregional recurrence-free survival. The frequencies of BRAF, RAS, TERT, TP53 and PTEN alterations were 28%, 40%, 55%, 11%, and 10%, respectively. TP53, PTEN and TERT were independent molecular markers associated with an unfavourable outcome, independently of clinicopathological parameters. The coexistence of BRAF V600E and TERT promoter mutation increased the risk of DM. Conclusions: The above data support the classification of HGTC as a single group with two distinct subtypes based on tumour differentiation: HGTC-PDTC and HGTC-nonPDTC. © 2021 John Wiley & Sons Ltd
Journal Title: Histopathology
Volume: 80
Issue: 2
ISSN: 0309-0167
Publisher: Wiley Blackwell  
Date Published: 2022-01-01
Start Page: 322
End Page: 337
Language: English
DOI: 10.1111/his.14550
PUBMED: 34449926
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC9425734
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 1 February 2022 -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. James A Fagin
    181 Fagin
  2. Ronald A Ghossein
    486 Ghossein
  3. Robert M Tuttle
    483 Tuttle
  4. Eric J Sherman
    344 Sherman
  5. Nora Katabi
    306 Katabi
  6. Snjezana Dogan
    190 Dogan
  7. Ian Ganly
    432 Ganly
  8. Bin   Xu
    230 Xu
  9. Anjanie Khimraj
    13 Khimraj
  10. Maelle Fouad Saliba
    22 Saliba