Chapter 25: MNT for Thyroid Cancer Flashcards

1
Q

Thyroid produces thyroid hormones wich help regulate:

A

Heart rate
Body temperature
Weight
Calcitonin (hormone that helps maintain normal calcium levels)

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2
Q

Thyroid cancers develop in _____ and _____ cells.

A

Follicular and parafollicular

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3
Q

Risk Factors for Thyroid Cancer (TC)

A

Exposure to radiation (especially during infancy or childhood)
Genetic mutations (genetic factors are responsible for 20-25% of medullary carcinomas)
Female gender
Age >25 and 65
Family history
Personal hx of benign thyroid conditions such as goiter
Obesity

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4
Q

Symptoms of TC

A

Typically asymptomatic in early TC.

Cough, difficulty swallowing or breathing, enlargement of or lump on the thyroid gland, neck pain, and hoarseness or change in voice can occur.

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5
Q

How is TC diagnosed?

A

Blood tests: TSH or calcitonin
Thyroid ultrasound
Radioactive scans
Biopsy

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6
Q

Dietary Risk Factors - Iodine

A

Chronic iodine insufficiency is a/w increased risk of follicular carcinoma

High iodine intake is a/w increased risk of papillary carcinoma

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7
Q

Dietary Risk Factors - Cruciferous Vegetables

A

Contain goitrogens (goiter producing compound) that can induce thyroid cancer in animals. Not supported in human studies.

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8
Q

Dietary Risk Factors - MISC

A

Potential associated with soy intake, green tea, alcohol consumption, nitrate and nitrite consumption

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9
Q

Staging of TC

A

Based on primary tumor assessment, regional lymph nodes, distant mets. Stages I - IV.

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10
Q

Types of Thyroid Cancer

A

Anaplastic TC - most undifferentiated, always considered stage IV, very aggressive and usually fatal, least common type of TC
Follicular TC - differentiated, generally good outcomes, more aggressive than papillary and can spread to other organs, more likely to recur than papillatry
Medullary TC - somewhat aggressive, less differentiated, originates in C-cells, more likely to spread to LN and other organs, releases high levels of calcitonin and carcinoembryonic antigen
Papillary TC - most common, 80% of TC, best prognosis

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11
Q

Treatment - Surgery

A

Therapy of choice
Total or near-total thyroidectomy is indicated often
Lobectomy can be performed in some cases
If pt has LN mets, removal of LN and neck dissection are recommended
Post-op thyroid hormone replacement is necessary

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12
Q

Risk of TC Surgery

A

Surgery can damage recurrent laryngeal nerve which can affect swallowing function

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13
Q

Chemotherapy

A

Lenvatinib works well but is toxic (67% of pts respond well). We don’t use Sorafenib as much as we used to as it has a lower response rate (11%).

BRAF mutation? Standard treatment is Dabrafenibi and Trametinib based on phase II study.

Cabozantinib was recently approved for use as well.

Targeted therapies don’t work quite as well.

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14
Q

Radiotherapty and Radioactive Iodine Therapy (RAI)

A

May be indicated post-op to treat persistent disease in differentiated TC. RAI is concentrated by TC cells and leads to apoptosis; since only thyroid cancer cells can take up RAI, no other tissues are harmed.

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15
Q

NIS of RAI

A

Nausea, dry mouth, change in taste, late onset damage of salvary glands and dental caries.

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16
Q

Low Iodine Diet

A

Used in conjunction with RAI scans and therapy
Rational is to deplete whole body stores of iodine before scans or therapy and thereby optimize RAI uptake in thyroid cells
Urinary iodine concentration study can assess pt’s iodine status

17
Q

Guidelines for Low Iodine Diet

A

50 mcg or less per day
Avoid: iodized salt, seafood, sea products, dairy, egg yolks, iodate dough containers, chocolate, erythrocine (FC&C Red No 3).
Avoid: MVI that contains iodine, supplements made from sea based products (such as selenium and fish oil)

18
Q

T/F: Dysphagia can occur with TC

A

True.

Usually occurs due to enlarged thyroid compressing on structures involved in swallowing.

Recommend small, frequent meals with moist food

Consult SLP