Pediatric Medullary Thyroid Carcinoma: Clinical Presentations and Long-Term Outcomes in 144 Patients Over 6 Decades

Author:

Hensley Sarah G12ORCID,Hu Mimi I2ORCID,Bassett Roland L3ORCID,Ying Anita K24ORCID,Zafereo Mark E5ORCID,Perrier Nancy D6ORCID,Busaidy Naifa L2ORCID,Hyde Samuel M7ORCID,Grubbs Elizabeth G6ORCID,Waguespack Steven G24ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Baylor College of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Section of Pediatric Diabetes and Endocrinology , Houston, TX 77030 , USA

2. Department of Endocrine Neoplasia and Hormonal Disorders, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center , Houston, TX 77030 , USA

3. Department of Biostatistics, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center , Houston, TX 77030 , USA

4. Department of Pediatrics-Patient Care, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center , Houston, TX 77030 , USA

5. Department of Head and Neck Surgery, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center , Houston, TX 77030 , USA

6. Department of Surgical Oncology, Section of Surgical Endocrinology, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center , Houston, TX 77030 , USA

7. Clinical Cancer Genetics, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center , Houston, TX 77030 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Context Sporadic medullary thyroid carcinoma (sMTC) rarely occurs in childhood and no studies have specifically focused on this entity. Objective To describe the clinical presentations and long-term outcomes of a large cohort of children and young adults with sMTC compared with hereditary MTC (hMTC). Methods Retrospective study of 144 patients diagnosed with MTC between 1961 and 2019 at an age ≤ 21 years and evaluated at a tertiary referral center. Results In contrast to hMTC (n = 124/144, 86%), patients with sMTC (n = 20/144, 14%) are older (P < .0001), have larger tumors (P < .0001), a higher initial stage grouping (P = .001) and have more structural disease (P = .0045) and distant metastases (DM) (P = .00084) at last follow-up, but are not more likely to die from MTC (P = .42). Among 77 patients diagnosed clinically, not by family history (20/20 sMTC and 57/124 hMTC), there was no difference in the initial stage (P = .27), presence of DM at diagnosis (P = 1.0), disease status at last follow-up (P = .13), overall survival (P = .57), or disease-specific survival (P = .87). Of the 12 sMTC tumors that underwent somatic testing, 11 (91%) had an identifiable alteration: 10 RET gene alterations and 1 ALK fusion. Conclusion sMTC is primarily a RET-driven disease that represents 14% of childhood-onset MTC in this cohort. Pediatric sMTC patients are older, present with clinical disease at a more advanced TNM classification, and have more persistent disease at last follow-up compared with hMTC, but these differences disappear when comparing those presenting clinically. Somatic molecular testing should be considered in sMTC patients who would benefit from systemic therapy.

Funder

NIH/NCI Cancer Center

Publisher

The Endocrine Society

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