A keen instinct for drama and a mastery of
expressive gesture are intensified by the subtle use
of color and chiaroscuro in this example of Japanese art.
Hürthle Cell Carcinoma
Richard F. Grossman, MD, and Orlo H. Clark, MD
Total thyroidectomy with central neck lymph node dissection is the therapy of
choice for patients with Hürthle cell carcinoma.
Background: Hürthle cell carcinoma represents approximately 3% of all
differentiated thyroid cancers. The terminology is often confusing, and discrimination
between Hürthle cell carcinoma and benign Hürthle cell tumors can be unclear. Thus,
optimal treatment of patients with these diseases remains unsettled.
Methods: The authors reviewed published evidence on the presentation, biologic
behavior, and treatment outcomes for this disease. In addition, they summarized their
experience involving a series of 14 patients with Hürthle cell carcinoma.
Results: Hürthle cell carcinoma generally produces thyroglobulin and rarely takes
up radioactive iodine. It is frequently bilateral or multifocal within the thyroid gland
and often presents with local invasion. Hürthle cell carcinoma is associated with a high
rate of locoregional recurrence and significant mortality.
Conclusions: The authors advocate total thyroidectomy with central neck dissection
as the therapy of choice for patients with Hürthle cell carcinoma.
Introduction
Hürthle cell carcinoma of the thyroid is a rare neoplasm comprising about 3% of
all differentiated thyroid cancer. Discrimination of Hürthle cell carcinoma from
benign Hürthle cell tumors, the natural history of Hürthle cell carcinoma
and the optimal treatment of patients who have them, are unsettled issues in thyroid
surgery. The terminology itself arose in confusion when Ewing in 1919 mistook the
histologic appearance of these oxyphilic tumors and applied to them the name of the man
who earlier had described the canine C cell.[1] Hürthle cell tumors appear to be
of follicular rather than C cell origin and are also referred to as oxyphil tumors,
oncocytomas, mitochondriomas or Askanazy cell tumors. The latter designation honors the
description of the oxyphil cell by Askanazy in 1898.[2]
Evidence suggesting that Hürthle cells tumors arise from follicular cells
includes histologic features, the frequent production by Hürthle cell carcinomas
of thyroglobulin (Tg), and the presence in benign Hürthle cell tumors of an intact
thyrotropin receptor adenylate cyclase signal transduction pathway.[3] Hürthle
cell carcinomas do not appear to be variants of follicular cell carcinoma, however, as
they express different oncogenes.[4]
Presentation and Diagnosis
The predominant presentation of Hürthle or oxyphilic cells in the thyroid is as
a nonencapsulated hyperplastic island, termed Hürthle cell change or
Hürthle cell hyperplasia, often noted incidentally in the setting of goiter or
thyroiditis (Fig 1). Hürthle cell change is generally regarded to be a form of
benign metaplasia rather than frank neoplasia. Solitary encapsulated tumors composed of
Hürthle cells are neoplastic. Most are benign adenomas. 
Absence in the past of uniform pathologic criteria for distinguishing adenoma from
malignancy contributed to widely disparate reports of the prevalence of Hürthle
cell carcinoma, ranging from 5%[5] to 56% of all Hürthle cell tumors.[6] In our
experience, the breakdown of Hürthle cell tumors is approximately 80% benign
Hürthle cell adenomas and 20% Hürthle cell carcinomas. Misclassification
in older studies of some Hürthle cell carcinomas as benign Hürthle cell
tumors, and vice versa, led to the perception that some histologically benign appearing
Hürthle cell tumors are malignant.[7] In the past, some authors advocated the use
of an "intermediate" category of malignancy based on "partial" angio
or capsular invasion.[8] These reports ignited a lively debate over how much thyroid to
remove in the surgical treatment of patients with Hürthle cell tumors.
Criteria applied previously that led to the misclassification of some tumors
nuclear atypia, pattern of growth, presence of necrosis, for example have been
abandoned, as has any notion of the existence of an "intermediate" category of
malignancy, so that today diagnosis based on permanent sections (Figs 2 and 3) and
accurate preoperative staging are reliable and rest on the presence of angioinvasion,
capsular invasion, local tissue invasion, lymph node metastasis or distant metastasis. The
subtle histologic nature of angio or capsular invasion means that it is often not possible
to diagnose Hürthle cell carcinoma until some days after surgery when the
permanent sections are completed. In one recent review, only one frozen section in 29
correctly provided a diagnosis of Hürthle cell carcinoma in tumors that all met
the permanent section criteria for malignancy.[9] Permanent section results using the
criteria set out above are reliable, with benign-appearing tumors, probably representing
misdiagnoses based on sampling errors, ultimately displaying malignant behavior in 0% to
1% of cases.[5,10,11]
Cytologic criteria cannot distinguish Hürthle cell adenoma from Hürthle
cell carcinoma.[11-13] Aspiration biopsy cytology (ABC) may show only
"Hürthle cell neoplasm," which will be Hürthle cell carcinoma in
15% to 20% of cases. Thyroid scanning will show a "cold" nodule except in the
rare Hürthle cell carcinoma that takes up iodine.[14] Neither radionuclide
scanning nor ultrasound can distinguish Hürthle cell adenomas from Hürthle
cell carcinomas.
Fewer than 400 cases of Hürthle cell carcinoma have been reported in the
literature over the past 75 years. From the more recent series employing reliable criteria
for malignancy, a clinical picture of Hürthle cell carcinoma is beginning to
emerge.[8,9,15-20] Hürthle cell carcinoma is a disease with peak incidence in the
fifth to seventh decade. Women are predominantly affected by a ratio of 3:1, similar to
the other thyroid tumors of follicular origin. Our recent series is unusual in its nearly
2:1 predominance of men.[20] The tumors present as a solitary or dominant mass within the
thyroid gland and measure 4.0 to 5.0 cm on average by the time they are resected.
Lymphadenopathy, vocal cord paralysis or distant metastases are unusual at presentation
but may complicate recurrent disease. Hürthle cell tumors are almost always
endocrinologically silent (though they may produce as yet unidentified humoral factors)
and patients are euthyroid unless thyroid hormone homeostasis is perturbed for another
reason. Hürthle cell carcinomas usually produce Tg but rarely trap radioactive
iodine.
Treatment Approach
While numerous studies have questioned which Hürthle cell neoplasms are
malignant, few have addressed the treatment of patients with Hürthle cell
carcinoma. The debate over how much thyroid to remove follows the controversy over
differentiated thyroid carcinoma in general, with some authorities claiming that thyroid
lobectomy is adequate in that papillary cancer, in particular, is a well-behaved lesion
with little tendency to recur. Our position has been that total thyroidectomy is indicated
for well-differentiated thyroid cancer over 1 cm in diameter, because even though the risk
of recurrence may be low, the outcome of as many as one third of recurrences is fatal. As
long as the operation is performed safely by an experienced endocrine surgeon, total
thyroidectomy offers the advantages of removing all diseased gland (up to 85% of papillary
thyroid cancers are multifocal or bilateral within the gland), facilitating thyroid
scanning with lower doses of radioactive iodine (absence of thyroid gland concentrates
uptake into residual or recurrent disease), improving radioablative uptake by metastases,
and allowing postoperative surveillance with the measurement of serum Tg levels (in the
absence of a thyroid gland, a high postoperative baseline Tg, or a rising Tg later on, is
a sensitive marker for residual tumor or tumor recurrence, respectively).
The picture emerging of Hürthle cell carcinoma is that of an aggressive lesion,
with a prognosis worse than papillary carcinoma of the thyroid.[20-22] In our series of 14
patients with Hürthle cell carcinoma, four patients have died.[20] Of five
patients followed longer than 18 months, four (80%) had recurrence and three (60%) died of
Hürthle cell carcinoma. Four of five recurrences were located in the neck, and two
of the four deaths were due to locally recurrent disease. The other two deaths were the
result of metastatic disease. In the literature, the overall cause-specific mortality rate
is 111 patient deaths out of 364 cumulative cases of Hürthle cell carcinoma
reported (30% death rate).
A number of factors argue for total thyroidectomy as the initial treatment of patients
with Hürthle cell carcinoma, although the incidence of the disease is so low that
a prospective, randomized study of treatment options probably will never be conducted.
Several studies have confirmed that Hürthle cell carcinoma is multifocal in
approximately 30% to 35% of cases[9,20,23]; fewer studies have examined resected glands
for the presence of bilateral disease, but we found an incidence of almost 15%.[20] Any
operation less than total thyroidectomy might leave behind foci of cancer. Hürthle
cell carcinomas generally produce Tg, so removal of the entire gland increases the utility
of this marker of recurrence. While the failure of most Hürthle cell carcinomas to
take up radioactive iodine means that total thyroidectomy does not offer any advantage in
increasing tumoral uptake of the isotope, it does portend that thyroidectomy is the only
treatment available, and that because radioactive iodine in ablative doses is usually
ineffective for salvage, surgical treatment should be most aggressive at the outset.
We treat patients with Hürthle cell neoplasms in the same manner as patients
with follicular neoplasms of the thyroid. We generally obtain an ABC as part of the
preoperative workup. We generally do not obtain a preoperative thyroid scan in the
evaluation of a patient with a Hürthle cell tumor as so few take up iodine. If
indicators during surgery are strong that the Hürthle cell lesion is malignant
(eg, gross appearance or frozen section demonstrating local invasion), we perform a total
thyroidectomy with ipsilateral central neck lymphadenectomy. Malignancy can be diagnosed
in the operating room by frozen section or gross criteria about half the time. If the
frozen section appears benign and there are no other indicators of malignancy, we perform
thyroid lobectomy and isthmusectomy. No further treatment is necessary if the permanent
section confirms a benign histology. If the permanent section shows Hürthle cell
carcinoma, we return the patient to the operating room for completion total thyroidectomy.
While this algorithm results in two trips to the operating room for about 10% of all
patients with Hürthle cell tumor (or 50% of patients with Hürthle cell
carcinoma), it succeeds in bringing to the operating room only once that 10% of patients
who have carcinoma treated by total thyroidectomy at the outset and that 80% of patients
whose final diagnosis is Hürthle cell adenoma who are adequately treated with
lobectomy.
The completeness of the total thyroidectomy should be assessed by radioiodine scan
three to four months after surgery. We ablate any thyroid remnant with I131 to
eliminate all tissue at risk and to facilitate the use of Tg in surveillance for tumor
recurrence. If the serum Tg does not fall to 3 ng/mL or lower after total thyroidectomy or
rises during follow-up, residual or recurrent disease, respectively, should be suspected.
Thyroid-stimulating hormone elevation occurring when the patient is hypothyroid during
preparation for thyroid scanning may elicit rises in Tg that are not otherwise detectable,
and this, therefore, is the optimal time to assay Tg in search of early recurrences. Tg
elevations noted while the patient is euthyroid, on thyroid hormone replacement, are
especially concerning for a larger burden of recurrent disease. Radioiodine scanning
should be performed in the workup of possible recurrence to detect the small number of
Hürthle cell carcinomas that take up the isotope and may be susceptible to
ablation.[14] Recently, abnormal 99mTc-sestamibi accumulation by Hürthle cell
carcinoma has been reported to be a sensitive marker of recurrence.[24] Unfortunately,
sestamibi cannot be used for ablation.
Follow-up
Most recurrences of Hürthle cell carcinoma are found in the neck, while the
lung is the most common site of distant metastasis. Palpation of the neck may reveal
recurrent disease, while chest x-ray may suggest metastasis. A computed tomography scan or
magnetic resonance imaging of the neck, mediastinum, and chest are valuable adjuncts in
diagnosis of recurrent disease.
Recurrent disease is treated surgically with good palliation and appreciable
prolongation of life often resulting from local excision and neck dissection for recurrent
neck disease or pulmonary wedge resection for lung metastasis.[20,25,26] External beam
radiation may be considered for patients with unresectable disease but is not curative.
Octreotide has also been employed without success in the treatment of recurrent
carcinoma.[27] In our series, patients died of Hürthle cell carcinoma an average
of 34 months after recurrence.[20]
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- Clark OH, Gerend PL. Thyrotropin receptor-adenylate cyclase system in Hürthle
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- Masood S, Auguste LJ, Westerbank A, et al. Differential oncogenic expression in thyroid
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Node Dissection: Treatment of Choice for Hürthle Cell Carcinoma. In: International
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- DeGroot LJ, Kaplan EL, Shukla MS, et al. Morbidity and mortality in follicular thyroid
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Surgery. 1985;98:777-783.
- Yen TC, Lin HD, Lee CH, et al. The role of technetium-99m sestamibi whole-body scans in
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From the Department of Surgery, University of California, San Francisco/ Mount Zion
Medical Center, San Francisco, Calif.
Address reprint requests to Dr Clark at the Department of Surgery, University of
California, San Francisco/Mount Zion Medical Center, 1600 Divisadero Avenue, C-342, San
Francisco, CA 94115.
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