Differentiated thyroid carcinomas from children and adolescents express IGF-I and the IGF-I receptor (IGF-I-R). Cancers with the most intense IGF-I-R expression may be more aggressive Journal Article


Authors: Gydee, H.; O'Neill, J. T.; Patel, A.; Bauer, A. J.; Tuttle, R. M.; Francis, G. L.
Article Title: Differentiated thyroid carcinomas from children and adolescents express IGF-I and the IGF-I receptor (IGF-I-R). Cancers with the most intense IGF-I-R expression may be more aggressive
Abstract: Adult thyroid cancers express IGF and IGF-I receptor (IGF-I-R), but the clinical impact is not clear. No previous study examined any childhood thyroid cancers that are well-differentiated and have a favorable prognosis. We used immunohistochemistry to determine IGF-I and IGF-I-R in 23 papillary thyroid cancers (PTC) and 6 follicular thyroid cancers (FTC) from children and adolescents. IGF-I was detected in 45% and IGF-I-R in 43% of cancers. IGF-I and IGF-I-R were found more often in PTC (IGF-I = 9/23, IGF-I-R = 8/19) than normal surrounding thyroid (IGF-I = 0/10, p = 0.032 and IGF-I-R = 0/10, p = 0.030). There were too few FTC to support independent statistical analysis, but IGF-I was found in 4 of 6 FTC (0/10 normal), and IGF-I-R was found in 2 of 4 FTC (0/ 10 normal). IGF-I-R staining was more intense in aggressive (invasive, metastatic, recurrent, or persistent) than indolent tumors (confined to the gland, p = 0.029). Over time, six tumors recurred, five of which expressed IGF-I-R. Overall recurrence risk was significantly greater for tumors that expressed IGF-I-R (p = 0.05) but only approached statistical significance (p = 0.08) when disease-free survival was determined. We conclude that differentiated thyroid cancers of children and adolescents express IGF-I and IGF-I-R. Tumors that express IGF-I-R are more likely to show aggressive clinical features (invasion beyond the capsule, metastasis, or recurrence) and persistence despite treatment.
Keywords: adolescent; adult; cancer survival; child; clinical article; human tissue; disease-free survival; neoplasm recurrence, local; tumor volume; carcinoma, papillary; childhood cancer; somatomedin c receptor; receptor, igf type 1; radioactive iodine; thyroidectomy; neoplasm invasiveness; thyroid carcinoma; thyroid neoplasms; somatomedin c; insulin-like growth factor i; thyroid papillary carcinoma; adenocarcinoma, follicular; thyroid follicular carcinoma; humans; prognosis; human; male; female; priority journal; article
Journal Title: Pediatric Research
Volume: 55
Issue: 4
ISSN: 0031-3998
Publisher: Int Pediatric Research Foundation, Inc  
Date Published: 2004-04-01
Start Page: 709
End Page: 715
Language: English
DOI: 10.1203/01.pdr.0000111282.98401.93
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 14973173
DOI/URL:
Notes: Pediatr. Res. -- Cited By (since 1996):16 -- Export Date: 16 June 2014 -- CODEN: PEREB -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Robert M Tuttle
    483 Tuttle