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“That’s the downside. If you remove only half, you don’t need the replacement therapy,” Haddad said. “It’s a pill you take once a day, just like a pill for blood pressure or something, but you have to take it for the rest of your life, which is not insignificant.”
Preoperative thyroid cancer diagnoses usually involve inserting a needle and removing a few cells from the suspicious lump. When tests come back positive for cancer, it’s best to repeat the test and to get a second opinion before surgery, Haddad said. Still, the only way to be sure a growth is benign or malignant is to remove at least part of the gland.
Some doctors and patients opt for removing the entire gland just to be sure, but Haddad said thyroid cancers tend to be so “well-behaving” that taking the more drastic step usually doesn’t make sense.
“If five years down the road she develops cancer in the other lobe, her prognosis remains excellent. So there’s not really a downside in waiting, in terms of outcome and diagnoses, because we’re dealing with such a highly curable cancer here,” Haddad said.
Dr. R. Michael Tuttle, an endocrinologist at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York, is chairman of a network of experts that writes the U.S. guidelines for dealing with thyroid cancers, has traveled to Argentina and has seen its quality of care. He says the president’s team did nothing wrong.
“What I would assume was that the biopsy they did was read as papillary thyroid cancer, and 98 percent of the time they’d be right,” Tuttle said.
“This two percent miss rate happens everywhere in world ... it happened to me last year,” he added. “Argentina has some of the leading thyroid cancer people in the world, so I don’t have any doubt that she was in really good hands.”
News source:nydailynewsPreoperative thyroid cancer diagnoses usually involve inserting a needle and removing a few cells from the suspicious lump. When tests come back positive for cancer, it’s best to repeat the test and to get a second opinion before surgery, Haddad said. Still, the only way to be sure a growth is benign or malignant is to remove at least part of the gland.
Some doctors and patients opt for removing the entire gland just to be sure, but Haddad said thyroid cancers tend to be so “well-behaving” that taking the more drastic step usually doesn’t make sense.
“If five years down the road she develops cancer in the other lobe, her prognosis remains excellent. So there’s not really a downside in waiting, in terms of outcome and diagnoses, because we’re dealing with such a highly curable cancer here,” Haddad said.
Dr. R. Michael Tuttle, an endocrinologist at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York, is chairman of a network of experts that writes the U.S. guidelines for dealing with thyroid cancers, has traveled to Argentina and has seen its quality of care. He says the president’s team did nothing wrong.
“What I would assume was that the biopsy they did was read as papillary thyroid cancer, and 98 percent of the time they’d be right,” Tuttle said.
“This two percent miss rate happens everywhere in world ... it happened to me last year,” he added. “Argentina has some of the leading thyroid cancer people in the world, so I don’t have any doubt that she was in really good hands.”
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