American thyroid association design and feasibility of a prospective randomized controlled trial of prophylactic central lymph node dissection for papillary thyroid carcinoma Journal Article


Authors: Carling, T.; Carty, S. E.; Ciarleglio, M. M.; Cooper, D. S.; Doherty, G. M.; Kim, L. T.; Kloos, R. T.; Mazzaferri, E. L.; Peduzzi, P. N.; Roman, S. A.; Sippel, R. S.; Sosa, J. A.; Stack, B. C. Jr; Steward, D. L.; Tufano, R. P.; Tuttle, R. M.; Udelsman, R.
Article Title: American thyroid association design and feasibility of a prospective randomized controlled trial of prophylactic central lymph node dissection for papillary thyroid carcinoma
Abstract: Background: The role of prophylactic central lymph node dissection in papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) is controversial in patients who have no pre- or intraoperative evidence of nodal metastasis (clinically N0; cN0). The controversy relates to its unproven role in reducing recurrence rates while possibly increasing morbidity (permanent hypoparathyroidism and unintentional recurrent laryngeal nerve injury). Methods and Results: We examined the design and feasibility of a multi-institutional prospective randomized controlled trial of prophylactic central lymph node dissection in cN0 PTC. Assuming a 7-year study with 4 years of enrollment, 5 years of average follow-up, a recurrence rate of 10% after 7 years, a 25% relative reduction in the rate of the primary endpoint (newly identified structural disease; i.e., persistent, recurrent, or distant metastatic disease) with central lymph node dissection and an annual dropout rate of 3%, a total of 5840 patients would have to be included in the study to achieve at least 80% statistical power. Similarly, given the low rates of morbidity, several thousands of patients would need to be included to identify a significant difference in rates of permanent hypoparathyroidism and unintentional recurrent laryngeal nerve injury. Conclusion: Given the low rates of both newly identified structural disease and morbidity after surgery for cN0 PTC, prohibitively large sample sizes would be required for sufficient statistical power to demonstrate significant differences in outcomes. Thus, a prospective randomized controlled trial of prophylactic central lymph node dissection in cN0 PTC is not readily feasible. © 2012, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
Keywords: adult; controlled study; major clinical study; cancer recurrence; outcome assessment; follow up; lymph node metastasis; lymph node dissection; prospective study; cancer prevention; randomized controlled trial; morbidity; practice guideline; postoperative complication; feasibility study; statistical significance; radioactive iodine; multicenter study; medical society; thyroid papillary carcinoma; hypoparathyroidism; recurrent laryngeal nerve injury
Journal Title: Thyroid
Volume: 22
Issue: 3
ISSN: 1050-7256
Publisher: Mary Ann Liebert, Inc  
Date Published: 2012-03-01
Start Page: 237
End Page: 244
Language: English
DOI: 10.1089/thy.2011.0317
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 22313454
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Export Date: 2 April 2012" - "CODEN: THYRE" - "Source: Scopus"
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  1. Robert M Tuttle
    481 Tuttle