There are many concepts of risk and prognostic
factor analysis for differentiated thyroid cancer. The prognostic role of lymph
node metastases in follicular thyroid cancer (FTC), however, is still
controversial. We performed a retrospective trial in 186 patients with FTC (124
women, 62 men; mean follow-up 5.5 years) questioning whether lymph node
metastases and radical thyroid surgery with neck dissection contribute to the
prognosis of FTC. Univariate analysis demonstrated that lymph node
metastasesp <0.005), tumor size (p <0.005), tumor stage (p <0.005), distant metastases
p = 0.0063), and gender (p = 0.003) are significant prognostic factors for
recurrence (Kaplan-Meier). Tumor size (p =
0.004), lymph node metastases p = 0.0478), and
distant metastases p = 0.0064) influenced
mortality. Age and extent of surgery were not significant for recurrence nor
was gender for mortality. Multivariate analysis (Cox regression test)
characterized tumor size (p <0.005) and lymph
node metastases p = 0.004) as prognostic factors
for recurrence of FTC. No significant difference was detected between patients
being treated by thyroidectomy when compared to patients treated by
thyroidectomy plus neck dissection in relation to recurrence. Our data
demonstrate lymph node metastases to be a significant prognostic factor for
recurrence of FTC and the patient’s survival. We advocate thyroidectomy
plus central lymph node dissection as the basic surgical strategy. For T3 and
T4 tumors, unilateral modified neck dissection is an all but optional
procedure. Whether radical surgery with thyroidectomy plus neck dissection has
an impact on survival remains questionable.