Differences in long-term quality of life between hemithyroidectomy and total thyroidectomy in patients treated for low-risk differentiated thyroid carcinoma.
By: Pim J Bongers, Caylee A Greenberg, Ralph Hsiao, Marloes Vermeer, Menno R Vriens, Martijn F Lutke Holzik, David P Goldstein, Karen Devon, Lorne E Rotstein, Anna M Sawka, Jesse D Pasternak

Department of Surgery, University Health Network, Toronto, ON, Canada; Department of Surgical Oncology and Endocrine Surgery, University Medical Center Utrecht, the Netherlands; Department of Surgery, Hospital Group Twente Almelo, the Netherlands.
2019-02-05; doi: 10.1016/j.surg.2019.04.060
Abstract

Background

The long-term health-related quality-of-life implications of treating low-risk differentiated thyroid cancer with total thyroidectomy or hemithyroidectomy is important to patients but remains poorly understood.

Methods

Using a cross-sectional mailed survey, we compared long-term health-related quality-of-life in low-risk differentiated thyroid cancer survivors treated with hemithyroidectomy to those treated with total thyroidectomy between 2005 and 2016 at a university hospital. European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life core Questionnaire version 3.0, the supplementary Thyroid Cancer specific questionnaire module version 2.0, and the Assessment of Survivor Concerns (ASC) questionnaires were used. Our primary outcome was the global scale of quality of life. Exploratory outcomes included differences among other health-related quality-of-life items corrected for potential confounders in multivariable regression analyses.

Results

The response rate was 51.0% (270 of 529), of which 59 patients (21.9%) were treated with hemithyroidectomy. Main outcome score global quality of life did not differ between groups (76.9 hemithyroidectomy vs 77.7 total thyroidectomy, P = .450). Exploratory analyses showed hemithyroidectomy to be associated with more worry about recurrence on the Assessment of Survivor Concerns questionnaire (2.4 hemithyroidectomy vs 2.1 total thyroidectomy, P = .021).

Conclusion

Long-term quality of life was not significantly different between low-risk differentiated thyroid cancer patients treated with total thyroidectomy compared with hemithyroidectomy. In secondary analyses, worry about recurrence appeared to be higher in individuals treated with hemithyroidectomy. These data highlight previously unreported impact of surgical regimen to the health-related quality-of-life for low-risk differentiated thyroid cancer patients.



Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier Inc.

PMID:31623853






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