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The changing characteristics and molecular profiles of papillary thyroid carcinoma over time: a systematic review

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Oncotarget. 2017; 8:10637-10649. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.12885

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Huy Gia Vuong, Ahmed M.A. Altibi, Amr Hesham Abdelhamid, Phuong Uyen Duong Ngoc, Vo Duy Quan, Mohamed Yousef Tantawi, Mohamed Elfil, Tran Le Huy Vu, Ahmed Elgebaly, Naoki Oishi, Tadao Nakazawa, Kenji Hirayama, Ryohei Katoh, Nguyen Tien Huy and Tetsuo Kondo _

Abstract

Huy Gia Vuong1,2, Ahmed M.A. Altibi3, Amr Hesham Abdelhamid4, Phuong Uyen Duong Ngoc5, Vo Duy Quan6, Mohamed Yousef Tantawi7, Mohamed Elfil8, Tran Le Huy Vu9, Ahmed Elgebaly10, Naoki Oishi1, Tadao Nakazawa1, Kenji Hirayama11, Ryohei Katoh1, Nguyen Tien Huy12 and Tetsuo Kondo1

1 Department of Pathology, University of Yamanashi, Yamanashi, Japan

2 Department of Pathology, Cho Ray Hospital, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

3 Faculty of Medicine, University of Jordan, Amman, Jordan

4 Faculty of Medicine, Menoufia University, Shebin El-Kom, Menoufia, Egypt

5 Pham Ngoc Thach University of Medicine, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

6 University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

7 Faculty of Medicine, Zagazig University, Zagazig, Egypt

8 Faculty of Medicine, Alexandria University, Alexandria, Egypt

9 University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA

10 Faculty of Medicine, Al-Azhar University, Cairo, Egypt

11 Department of Immunogenetics, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Leading Graduate School Program, and Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Nagasaki University, Sakamoto, Nagasaki, Japan

12 Department of Clinical Product Development, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Nagasaki University, Nagasaki, Japan

Correspondence to:

Tetsuo Kondo, email:

Nguyen Tien Huy, email:

Keywords: BRAF, RAS, RET/PTC, papillary, thyroid carcinoma

Received: August 02, 2016 Accepted: October 14, 2016 Published: October 25, 2016

Abstract

Background: The genetic alterations of papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) have been reported to change over the past few decades. We performed this systematic review to further examine the trends and modifications of patient demographic, clinicopathological features and molecular profiles of PTC over time.

Methods: A literature search was performed within six electronic databases to identify relevant articles. The inclusion criteria were published studies investigating BRAF mutations, RET/PTC rearrangements or RAS mutations in PTCs or classical PTCs. Two teams of reviewers independently screened titles and abstracts of all articles. Full texts of potential articles were read and extracted data were listed and stratified into an excel file according to country, city, institution, and surgical time period. Student t test and Pearson Chi-square were used to analyze the trends of demographic and clinicopathological features of PTC patients and the prevalence of each genetic alteration in individual institutions.

Results: From 3139 articles, we included 16 articles for final analysis. Our results showed an increasing trend of BRAF and a decreasing trend of RET/PTC prevalence over time in PTCs and classical PTCs, accompanied by an older age of PTC patients, an increase in proportion of PTMC and less aggressive behaviours of tumours.

Conclusions: The demographic and clinicopathological characteristics and molecular profile of PTCs have been changing over the past few decades. These modifications suggest changes in etiologies and risk factors of thyroid cancer that influence the tumorigenesis of PTCs.


INTRODUCTION

Thyroid cancer is the most common endocrine malignancy and its rate has been steadily increasing all over the world [1, 2]. The incidence of thyroid cancer more than doubled over the past 30 years in the United States (US) [3]. Davies et al. reported that the incidence of thyroid cancer was relatively stable until the early 1990s, after which its incidence increased remarkably due to an increase in PTCs [4]. The underlying causes of this increase are controversial. One proposal for the increasing incidence of thyroid cancer says it may be the result of two coexisting processes: increased diagnostic scrutiny and an increased number of cases due to unrecognized thyroid specific carcinogens [5]. Morris et al., however, stated that improved detection does not fully explain the rising incidence of thyroid cancer, and instead, a true increase in the incidence of thyroid cancer might be due to unknown hormonal, dietary, genetic or environmental risk factors [6].

In PTCs, the most common mutations are BRAF mutations, which were reported in 40-90% of cases from various geographical areas [7-9]. The second most common genetic alteration in PTC are RET/PTC rearrangements [10]. Both single- and multi-institutional studies in Italy, Korea and the US have shown a significant and steady increase in the prevalence of BRAF mutations [11-13]. On the other hand, RAS mutations have increased sharply, and RET/PTC rearrangements have steadily decreased over the years [11, 13, 14]. Marthur et al. also linked the increased BRAF mutation prevalence with increased thyroid cancer incidence [13]. However, it is still continuously debated whether the genetic background of PTC changed or not [14]. Therefore, we conducted this systematic literature review to investigate the worldwide trends of BRAF mutations, RET/PTC rearrangements and RAS mutations in PTCs.

RESULTS

Search results

We identified 3139 results from the six libraries, but only 626 articles met our selection criteria. After carefully reading full-text versions of these 626 articles, we excluded 232 more studies. Overall, we listed and stratified 394 articles containing prevalence data of at least one genetic alteration into an excel file according to country, city, institution and the time period when surgery was performed. We used this listing to facilitate further data selection for analysis as described in each section below. To avoid overlapping patient data between publications with overlapping surgical time periods of patients from the same institution, we selected studies with the larger number of patients. Our final analysis included 16 studies (Figure 1).

Flow diagram of study selection.

Figure 1: Flow diagram of study selection. Abbreviations: WHO GHL, World Health Organization Global Health Library; VHL, Virtual Health Library.

Table 1: Characteristics of included studies

Author / Year of publication / Country

Institution

Surgical Period

No. of cases

Mean of age

Tissue treatment method

Patient selection criteria

Detection method

(Manufacturer)

Mathur/2011/US [13]

University of California at San Francisco

1991 – 1995

1996 – 2000

2000 – 2005

74

103

51

46.4

43.5

48.7

Frozen

Frozen

Frozen

Consecutive patients underwent initial evaluation and treatment at the institution. Thyroidectomy was performed in all cases.

BRAF, RAS: Direct sequencing (Applied Biosystem)

RET/PTC: Nested PCR

Jung/2014/US [14]

University of Pittsburgh

1974 – 1985

1990 – 1992

2000

2009

62

22

24

65

37.0 a

51.0 a

50.0 a

53.0 a

FFPE

FFPE

FFPE

FFPE

Cases were chosen consecutively within each of preselected periods until the numeric target was fulfilled. No selection criteria of cPTCs were described.

BRAF, RAS: Real-time LightCycler PCR and fluorescent melting curve analysis (Roche)

RET/PTC: Dual-color interphase FISH

Romei/2012/Italy [11]

Endocrine units of Pisa, Perugia and Milan

1996 – 2000

2001 – 2005

2006 – 2010

56

98

106

40.9

44.0

47.6

Frozen

Frozen

Frozen

Cases were neither consecutive nor selected, and the same procedures of collection were followed in the three centers. No selection criteria of cPTCs were described.

BRAF: Direct sequencing (Applied Biosystem)

RET/PTC: Southern blotting

Nam/2012/Korea [18]

Seoul St. Mary’s Hospital

2008 – 2009

355

46.9

FFPE

Thyroid tumor tissues were sampled from patients with PTC who underwent thyroidectomy. No selection criteria of cPTCs were described.

BRAF: Direct sequencing (Applied Biosystem)

Lee/2014/Korea [19]

Seoul St. Mary’s Hospital

2011 – 2012

200

45.7

FFPE

The patients with PTC who underwent surgery at the institution during the selected time period were enrolled in this study. No selection criteria of cPTCs were described.

BRAF: Direct sequencing (Applied Biosystem)

Smyth/2005/Ireland [20]

St. James’s Hospital

1982 – 2003

18

49.6

FFPE

Samples of PTC accessioned between 1982 – 2003 were analysed. No selection criteria of cPTCs were described.

BRAF: Direct sequencing (Applied Biosystem)

Kowalska/2016/Poland [21]

Holycross Cancer Center

2000-2004

2005-2009

2010-2013

152

195

254

52.0 a

53.0 a

54.0 a

FFPE

FFPE

FFPE

Archived tumor tissue was retrieved from 785 unselected PTCs diagnosed between 2000-2013. No selection criteria of PTCs were described.

BRAF: Direct sequencing (Applied Biosystem), Allele-specific PCR and quantitative real time PCR (Qiagen)

Nakazawa/2009/Japan [22]

University of Yamanashi

2001 – 2006

14

50.4

FFPE

Surgical specimens were retrieved from the institution. A thorough review of clinical data revealed no history of radiation exposure. No selection critera of cPTCs were described.

RET/PTC: Nested PCR

Vuong/2016/Japan [23]

University of Yamanashi

2011 – 2014

59

49.3

FFPE

We selected randomly patients with primary PTC who had been initially treated at the institution. No selection criteria of cPTCs were described.

RET/PTC: Nested PCR

Lee/2013/Korea [26]

Samsung Medical Center

2008 – 2009

396

47.0

FNAB

Patients who underwent thyroidectomy for primary PTC during the time period were enrolled. No selection criteria of cPTCs were described.

BRAF: Direct sequencing (Applied Biosystem)

Kang/2013/Korea [27]

Samsung Medical Center

2010 – 2011

128

48.0

FFPE

Patients with PTC were randomly retrieved from the surgical pathology files. No selection criteria of cPTCs were described.

BRAF: Direct sequencing (Applied Biosystem)

Zheng/2013/China [24]

Tianjin Medical University Cancer Hospital

2001 – 2010

977

46.0

FFPE

A chart reviewed identified 2046 patients with PTC who underwent surgery during the time period. Among of them, 977 patients had PTMCs. No selection criteria of PTMCs were described.

BRAF: Direct sequencing (Applied Biosystem)

Lu/2013/China [25]

Tianjin Medical University Cancer Hospital

2013 – 2014

1984

45.0 a

FFPE

The clinical data was reviewed on 1990 PTMCs during the time period. No selection criteria of PTMCs were described.

BRAF: Direct sequencing (Applied Biosystem)

Barzon/2008/Italy [28]

University of Padova

2005 – 2007

83

43.6

Frozen

Consecutive patients who underwent thyroidectomy at the institution in the selected period and had a pathological diagnosis of PTC. No selection criteria of PTCs were described.

BRAF: Direct sequencing (Applied Biosystem)

Pelizzo/2011/Italy [29]

University of Padova

2008 – 2009

270

48.9

FNAB

Consecutive patients within selected time period were prospectively enrolled. All patients had a sonographic single node and/or a node with suspected features who underwent US-guided FNA and subsequent thyroidectomy at the institution.

BRAF: Direct sequencing (Applied Biosystem)

Hwang/2009/Korea [30]

Samsung Medical Center

2008

135

47.0

FNAB

Consecutive patients with PTC that had been confirmed surgically were included in the study. All patients underwent ultrasound and ultrasound-guided FNA.

BRAF: Direct sequencing (Applied Biosystem) and allele-specific PCR

Abbreviations: cPTC, classical papillary thyroid carcinoma; PTMC, papillary thyroid microcarcinoma; FFPE, formalin-fixed paraffin embedded; FNAB, Fine-needle aspiration biopsy

a Median value

Trends for BRAF mutations, RET/PTC rearrangements and RAS mutations in classical PTCs from individual institutions

BRAF mutations have been reported to be associated with variants of PTCs: high prevalence in tall cell variant and classical PTCs and low prevalence in FVPTCs. In contrast, RAS mutations were reported as most commonly found in FVPTCs. Therefore, we examined the trends of BRAF mutations, RET/PTC rearrangements and RAS mutations in classical PTCs, the most common PTC variant, to avoid bias caused by other variants. We used the following criteria to select eligible data from the stratified list: (i) the study institution had available data on BRAF mutations, RET/PTC rearrangements or RAS mutations in classical PTCs from at least 2 different surgical time periods, (ii) the same detection method provided by the same manufacturer was used between the surgical time periods and (iii) patients with classical PTCs from all surgical periods received the same treatment (for example, all patients underwent total thyroidectomy) or the authors did not use any criteria that could influence the characteristics of classical PTCs during patient selection in each period.

We found appropriate BRAF data from two US institutions (University of California at San Francisco (UCSF) [13] and University of Pittsburgh [14]), an Italian multicenter study at the Endocrine Units of Pisa/Perugia/Milan [11], a Korean medical center (Seoul St. Mary’s Hospital) [15, 16], an Irish institution (St. James’s Hospital) [17] and an institution from Poland (Holycross Cancer Center) [18]. Prevalence of BRAF mutations in classical PTCs increased significantly in the studies from all of the institutions, except Seoul St. Mary’s Hospital in Korea (Table 2).

Table 2: The trends of BRAF mutations prevalence of classical PTCs from individual institutions

Country

City (State)

Institution

(Reference)

Prevalence of BRAF mutations in classical PTCs

Period 1

Period 2

Period 3

Period 4

P

US

San Francisco (CA)

UCSF [13]

1991-1995

38/74 (51.4%) DS

1996-2000

44/103 (42.7%)

DS

2001-2005

45/51 (88.2%)

DS

<0.001

US

Pittsburgh (PA)

Univ. of Pittsburgh [14]

1974-1985

31/62 (50.0%)

FMCA

1990-1992

16/22 (72.7%)

FMCA

2000

17/24 (70.8%)

FMCA

2009

50/65 (77.0%)

FMCA

0.008 a

Italy

Pisa/ Perugia/ Milan

Endocrine units of Pisa, Milan and Perugia [11]

1996-2000

21/56 (37.5%)

DS

2001-2005

61/98 (62.2%)

DS

2006-2010

56/106 (52.9%)

DS

0.012

Korea

Seoul

Seoul St. Mary’s Hospital [18, 19]

2008-2009

283/355 (79.7%)

DS

2011-2012

165/200 (82.5%)

DS

NS

Ireland

Dublin

St. James’s Hospital [20]

1982-1992

0/3 (0%)

DS

1993-2002

11/15 (73.3%)

DS

0.043

Poland

Kielce

Holycross Cancer Center [21]

2000-2004

88/152 (57.9%)

Three methods b

2005 – 2009

140/195 (71.8%)

Three methods b

2010 – 2013

189/254 (74.4%)

Three methods b

0.001 a

Abbreviations: NS, not significant; DS, direct sequencing; FMCA, fluorescent melting curve analysis

a P value for trend adjusted for age and sex

b All analyses that were performed prior to 2013 by DS and allele-specific PCR (AS-PCR) were verified by quantitative Real time PCR (qPCR). In total, the authors used qPCR to analyze BRAF mutations in 705/723 PTCs (97.5%). The majority of samples were tested using the three methods (DS, AS-PCR and qPCR).

We gathered enough information to determine the trends of RET/PTC rearrangements in classical PTCs at UCSF [13] and University of Pittsburgh [14], the University of Yamanashi (Japan) [19, 20] and St. James’s Hospital (Ireland) [17]. There was a decreasing trend of RET/PTC rearrangements over time in classical PTCs at all these institutions (Table 3).

We could determine the trends for RAS mutations in classical PTCs at UCSF [13] and University of Pittsburgh [14]. The prevalence of RAS mutations was low and gradually decreased from 4.1% during the 1991-1995 period to 0% during the 2001-2005 period (p = 0.369). At the University of Pittsburgh, the RAS mutation prevalence was extremely low and remained stable over four periods (Table 4). RAS mutations are rarely detected in classical PTCs and therefore it can be difficult to observe the trend. As a result of this, we decided to further analyze the change of RAS mutations in FVPTCs from individual institutions. We could only gather information to determine the trend of RAS mutations in FVPTCs from University of Pittsburgh [14]. The prevalence of RAS mutations in FVPTCs was relatively stable during the first three periods but significantly increased from 11.1% in 2000 to 44.3% in 2009.

All individual institutions applied the same protocol for mutational tests (same tissue treatment method, same DNA extraction method and same mutational detection method from same manufacturer) between different periods.

Table 3: The trends of RET/PTC rearrangements prevalence of classical PTCs from individual institutions

Country

City (State)

Institution

(Reference)

Prevalence of RET/PTC rearrangements in classical PTCs

Period 1

Period 2

Period 3

Period 4

P

US

San Francisco (CA)

UCSF [13]

1991-1995

10/74 (13.5%)

Nested PCR

1996-2000

19/103 (18.4%)

Nested PCR

2001-2005

2/51 (3.9%)

Nested PCR

0.047

US

Pittsburgh (PA)

Univ. of Pittsburgh [14]

1974-1985

6/52 (11.5%)

DCI FISH

1990-1992

1/18 (5.6%)

DCI FISH

2000

2/23 (8.7%)

DCI FISH

2009

1/65 (1.5%)

DCI FISH

NS

Japan

Yamanashi

Univ. of Yamanashi [22, 23]

2001-2006

4/14 (28.6%)

Nested PCR

2011-2014

1/59 (1.7%)

Nested PCR

<0.001

Ireland

Dublin

St. James’s Hospital [20]

1982-1992

2/3 (66.7%)

RT-PCR

1993-2002

4/15 (26.7%)

RT-PCR

NS

Abbreviations: DCI FISH, dual colour interphase fluorescent in situ hybridization; RT-PCR, reverse transcription PCR

Table 4: Trends of RAS mutations prevalence of classical PTCs from individual institutions

Country

City (State)

Institution

(Reference)

Prevalence of RAS rearrangements in classical PTCs

Period 1

Period 2

Period 3

Period 4

P

US

San Francisco (CA)

UCSF [13]

1991-1995

3/74 (4.1 %)

DS

1996-2000

3/103 (2.9%)

DS

2001-2005

0/51 (0%)

DS

NS

US

Pittsburgh (PA)

Univ. of Pittsburgh [14]

1974-1985

0/52 (0.0%)

FMCA

1990-1992

0/21 (0.0%)

FMCA

2000

0.24 (0.0%)

FMCA

2009

1/65 (1.5%)

FMCA

NS

Abbreviations: DS, direct sequencing; FMCA, fluorescent melting curve analysis

Trends for BRAF mutations in micro PTCs from individual institutions

According to the WHO classification, micro PTCs are PTCs with a diameter ≤1cm. Data on the stratified list was eligible for selection in our review of micro PTCs if they met the same criteria as the criteria described above in classical PTCs section.

We could determine trends of the BRAF mutations in micro PTCs from four institutions. The BRAF mutation prevalence significantly increased at the Tianjin Medical University Cancer Hospital from 40.1% during 2001-2010 to 62.7% during 2013-2014, and investigators used direct sequencing for mutational analyses in both periods [21, 22]. Although the detection method for BRAF mutations was not disclosed within this study by Lu et al [22], the authors provided this information by email and confirmed that the PTC patients were recruited from Tianjin Medical University Cancer Hospital (an affiliated hospital of Tianjin Medical University). We also found the prevalence of BRAF mutations increased significantly at Samsung Medical Center [23, 24] and Holycross Cancer Center [18] (Table 5). At the University of Pittsburgh, prevalence of BRAF mutations in micro PTCs decreased from 32.3% during 1974-1985 to 18.8% during 1990-1992 and then gradually increased to 23.5% in 2000 and 38% in 2009 [14]. This change, however, was not statistically significant (p = 0.442).

All included institutions used the same protocol for mutational detection among different surgical periods but one exception (Samsung Medical Center) in which the DNA materials were extracted from fine-needle aspirates in the former period and from paraffin-embedded tissues in the latter. However, all PCR products in these two periods were visualized on 2% agarose gel to confirm the good DNA quality prior to DNA purification step [23, 24], thus minimized the influence of technical issues on the results of direct sequencing.

Table 5: The trends of BRAF mutations prevalence of micro PTCs from individual institutions

Country

City (State)

Institution

(Reference)

Prevalence of BRAF mutations in micro PTCs

Period 1

Period 2

Period 3

Period 4

P

US

Pittsburgh (PA)

Univ. of Pittsburgh [14]

1974-1985

10/31(32.3%)

FMCA

1990-1992

3/16(18.8%)

FMCA

2000

4/17 (23.5%)

FMCA

2009

19/50(38%)

FMCA

NS

Poland

Kielce

Holycross Cancer Center [21]

2000-2004

45/90 (50%)

Three methods a

2005-2009

104/147 (70.7)

Three methods a

2010-2013

147/203 (72.4)

Three methodsa

0.001 b

Korea

Seoul

Samsung Medical Centre [26, 27]

2008-2009

253/396(63.9%)

DS

2010-2011

97/128(75.8%)

DS

0.013

China

Tianjin

Tianjin Medical Univ. Cancer Hospital [24, 25]

2001-2010

392/977(40.1%)

DS

2013-2014

1244/1984(62.7%)

DS

<0.001

Abbreviations: NS, not significant; DS, direct sequencing; FMCA, fluorescent melting curve analysis

a All analyses that were performed prior to 2013 by DS and allele-specific PCR (AS-PCR) were verified by quantitative Real time PCR (qPCR). In total, the authors used qPCR to analyze BRAF mutations in 705/723 PTCs (97.5%). The majority of samples were tested using the three methods (DS, AS-PCR and qPCR).

b P value for trend adjusted for age and sex

Trends of demographic and clinicopathological features and molecular profiles in PTCs over time

To avoid bias, we only included articles with consecutive or random selection of patients and no criteria used in patient selection. We evaluated these trends only within individual institutions. We also excluded articles with consecutive or random selection of patients, but which focused on particular characteristics such as classical PTCs or patients who underwent total thyroidectomy or radioiodine ablation (possible bias toward aggressive PTCs and therefore could influence the nature of the PTC cohort). Five single- or multi-institutions met our criteria: University of Pittsburgh [14], University of Padua [25, 26], multicenter study from Pisa/Perugia/Milan [11], Samsung Medical Centre [24, 27] and Holycross Cancer Center [18].

Patients’ ages at time of diagnosis increased during the most recent period at all included institutions. Another important finding is the significant increase in the proportion of micro carcinomas at all included institutions. The rates of ETE and lymph node metastasis (LNM) decreased at most of the institutions. The rate of multifocal PTCs stayed relatively stable over time (data not shown). Table 6 describes changes in demographic data and clinicopathological features of PTCs over time.

Quality assessment and risk of bias analysis

The quality score ranged from 40% to 70%, as measured by the NIH Quality Assessment Tool for Observational Cohort and Cross-Sectional Studies [28]. The lowest scored was 40% (Nakazawa et al. [19]) and the highest score was 70% (Jung et al. [14]). Quality of all included articles were classified as fair, except the two studies by Smyth et al. [17] and Nakazawa et al. [19] which were regarded as low quality. Most of included studies lacked sample size justification. Quality scores for each NIH criteria are shown in Supplementary Table.

DISCUSSION

The incidence of thyroid cancer has been increasing at an amazing rate in recent decades, especially PTCs [3, 4]. There is still debate as to whether improved detection is the only reason for the increase of PTCs or whether the tumorigenesis of thyroid cancer has changed [3, 6]. From our findings, the basic nature of PTC has been changing in recent decades (Table 6). The increase in the proportion of microcarcinomas that are diagnosed is associated with the improved detection rate in recent years, especially the development of ultrasonography. The majority of microcarcinomas show indolent behaviors, which can explain our findings that PTCs manifested less aggressive behaviors in the most recent periods we analyzed.

With improved screening and detection methods, it is reasonable to believe that patients would be diagnosed at an earlier age. However, our analysis suggests the opposite result. A number of publications showed that BRAF mutations are found in a higher proportion of older patients [12, 29-34], and RET/PTC rearrangements are commonly found in young patients [35-37]. Our systematic review demonstrated an increased prevalence of BRAF mutations (typically older patients) accompanied by a decreased prevalence of RET/PTC rearrangements (typically young patients).

Other than the multicenter study from the endocrine units of Pisa/Perugia/Milan [11] and the study from Holycross Cancer Center [18], the male proportion of patients with thyroid cancer has been decreasing over the years, although the difference was not significant (Table 6). Recent data showed that the increased incidence in thyroid cancer has affected more women than men, which supports our findings [3, 4].

Table 6: Modifications of demographic and clinicopathological characteristics of PTCs over time from individual institutions

Country

Institution

(Reference)

Period

Patients’ age (years)

p

Male

(%)

p

Tumor size

(%)

p

FVPTC (%)

p

ETE

(%)

p

LNM

(%)

p

US

University of Pittsburgh[14]

1974-1985

1990-1992

2000

2009

Median, 37

Median, 37

Median, 50

Median, 53

<0.001

27.6

27.1

13.2

24.5

NS

≤1cm, 42.0

≤1cm, 44.1

≤1cm, 41.5

≤1cm, 51.3

NS

10.2

3.4

13.2

25.2

<0.001

40.2

27.1

26.9

20.9

0.005

26.8

28.8

20.8

18.3

<0.001

Italy

University of Padua[28, 29]

2005-2007

2008-2009

Mean, 43.6*

Mean, 49.0

0.003

28.9

22.7

NS

ND

≤1cm, 24.9

NA

3.6

3.5

NS

ND

45.4

NA

51.8

38.3

0.049

Italy

Endocrine units of Pisa/Perugia/ Milan [11]

1996-2000

2001-2005

2006-2010

Mean, 40.9

Mean, 44.0

Mean, 47.6

0.014

32.0

25.0

32.7

NS

<2cm, 43.3

<2cm, 59.4

<2cm, 61.0

0.01

12.3

18.4

15.3

NS

T3/T4, 45

T3/T4, 39

T3/T4, 35

0.005

50.7

48.1

51.9

NS

Poland

Holycross Cancer Center [21]

2000-2004

2005-2009

2010-2013

Median, 50

Median, 53

Median, 53

NS

11.3

11.6

13.1

NS

≤1cm, 50.8

≤1cm, 63.1

≤1cm, 64.9

0.003

11.3

12.9

15.0

NS

22.5

25.3

24.9

NS

12.4

12.9

13.7

NS

Korea

Samsung Medical Centre[27, 30]

2008

2010-2011

Mean, 47.0

Mean, 48.0

NS

18.5

16.9

NS

≤1cm, 55.6

≤1cm, 80.5

<0.001

2.9

ND

NA

62.2

53.5

NS

48.1

36.5

0.043

Abbreviations: FVPTC, follicular variant papillary thyroid carcinoma; ETE, extrathyroidal extension; LNM, Lymph node metastasis; NS, not significant; NA, not available; ND, not described

* Estimated the sample mean and standard deviation as described by Hozo et al. [16]

There is still the question as to why the prevalence of BRAF mutations has been increasing significantly and the prevalence of RET/PTC rearrangements has been falling over the years. It is difficult to address the possible reasons for these changes because there are no known etiologies or risk factors that could trigger or activate these genetic alterations in PTCs other than radiation-induced RET/PTC [38]. From our findings, the significant increase of BRAF mutations in classical PTCs has occurred in different geographical areas (Table 2). Interestingly, we also found a remarkable increase of BRAF mutations in micro PTCs from Kielce, Seoul and Tianjin (Table 5). Elisei et al. suggested worldwide iodine supplementation as a potential candidate for the worldwide increasing trend of BRAF mutations [39]. How iodine intake may influence BRAF mutations in PTCs, however, is still controversial. Guan et al. reported that high iodine intake was associated with a higher prevalence of the BRAF V600E mutation in Chinese PTCs [40]. To the best of our knowledge, this is the only publication that linked iodine intake with occurrence of BRAF mutations. Frasca et al. reported there was no statistical difference in BRAF V600E prevalence in Italian PTCs from iodine-sufficient vs. iodine-deficient areas [8]. Data collected from the US showed that the US population has sufficient iodine intake [41, 42]. Because of this, it is irrational to correlate the increasing trend of BRAF mutations in classical PTCs seen in California and Pittsburgh with iodine intake. In our recent study, we found no statistical significance in the prevalence of BRAF V600E, RET/PTC rearrangements or RAS mutations in papillary and follicular thyroid carcinomas from an iodine-rich country (Japan) and an iodine-deficient country (Vietnam) [20]. Research in recent decades has increased our understanding of the molecular pathogenesis of thyroid cancer [1, 10, 43]. However, the origin of BRAF mutations in thyroid cancer still needs clarification. Further experimental studies should better clarify the origin of these mutations and help determine the reasons behind the increase in BRAF mutations over the last few decades.

A significant decrease of RET/PTC rearrangements in classical PTCs has been seen over the years (Tables 3). RET/PTC rearrangements have been strongly associated with radiation-induced PTCs [35, 44, 45]. RET/PTC rearrangements could also be detected in sporadic PTCs, but the underlying causes are unknown. A worldwide decrease in exposure to ionizing radiation in recent years, long after the Chernobyl accident or nuclear test experiments, has been proposed as a possible reason for the decrease of RET/PTC rearrangements [39]. Another hypothesis is that RET/PTC rearrangements are induced by unknown determinants that have been changing over the last decades [39]. We are in favor of the latter hypothesis because there were no nuclear accidents or atomic bomb experiments in the UK, Italy or Japan that could explain the high prevalence of RET/PTC rearrangements in sporadic PTCs in the earlier period of our review. In recent years, there has been another nuclear accident in Fukushima (Japan) in March 2011. BRAF mutations were the major genetic event (63.2%) in pediatric PTCs in Fukushima who underwent thyroidectomy in 2013 - 2014 and RET/PTC rearrangements were found in only 10.3% of cases [46]. This oncogenic profile is quite different from Chernobyl-related studies [47] but this result should be interpreted with cautions. Firstly, the thyroid equivalent doses in Fukushima (4.2 mSV) is much lower than in Chernobyl (490 mSV) [48, 49]. The second issue is that at the time of the study by Mitsutake et al. [46], the interval period from the date of accident to the onset was too short. Continuous studies are required to further investigate the trends of thyroid cancer incidence and genetic alterations in Japanese children.

At the University of Pittsburgh, the frequency of RAS mutations in PTCs remained low and stable during 1974-2000, then significantly increased in 2009 [14]. This trend was accompanied by a remarkable increase of FVPTCs in 2009 (Table 6). The incidence of FVPTC was reported to have increased nearly three-fold from 1973 to 2003 in the US [50]. Most of the increase in FVPTCs occurred after 1988 when the WHO classification changed. However, the proportion of FVPTCs did not change in Italy over the years [11]. We can only examine the trend of RAS mutations in classical PTCs from UCSF and University of Pittsburgh. The prevalence of RAS mutations did not change in classical PTCs from the University of Pittsburgh over the four periods in our review, but its prevalence in FVPTCs did increase significantly from 11.1% in 2000 to 44.3% in 2009 [14]. The authors from UCSF only selected patients with classical PTCs for their study, and they identified RAS mutations in 4%, 2.9% and 0% of cases during 1991 to 1995, 1996 to 2000 and 2001 to 2005, respectively (Table 4). Further studies should examine the trend of RAS mutations in PTCs, especially the follicular variant or follicular neoplasms (follicular thyroid adenoma and carcinoma).

Our systematic review is limited by the relatively small number of institutions that can be included. However, we must apply strict criteria as described above to avoid the potential bias caused by heterogeneities in population characteristics, detection methods and other factors that could influence the prevalence of genetic alterations. Further population-based studies with large number of cases are required to clarify these trends. In addition, we could not perform multivariate analysis for trends of mutations adjusted for the confounding factors because most of included studies did not provide those data or individual patient data. Jung et al. and Kowalska et al. investigated the trend of mutations in classical PTCs adjusted for age and sex and they found a significant increase of BRAF mutations over time [14, 18] (Table 2).

From our study, it is evident that the demographic and clinicopathological characteristics and the molecular profiles of PTCs have been changing over the years worldwide, suggesting the changes in tumorigenesis of PTCs. Further research on whether the genetic alterations in PTCs are primary or secondary and elucidation of molecular pathways in the pathogenesis of thyroid cancer can help us clarify the underlying causes of these modifications.

materials and METHODS

Search strategy and study identification

We conducted an electronic search within six databases (PubMed, Scopus, ISI Web of Science, Google Scholar, WHO Global Health Library and Virtual Health Library) to identify relevant articles using the search term: (papillary thyroid AND (carcinoma OR cancer) AND (BRAF OR RAS OR RET/PTC). We did not limit the search results as to language or year of publication. Our study included publications published before June 2015. Additionally, we performed a manual search by reviewing citations within the included publications and related references presented in PubMed. Our study strictly followed the recommendation of Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-analysis (PRISMA) statement [51]. We registered our study protocol at PROSPERO database: http://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/display_record.asp?ID= RD42015024778.

Selection criteria

We imported search results from 6 libraries into Endnote (Thompson Reuters) and deleted duplicates. Two teams of reviewers independently screened the abstracts using the predetermined selection criteria. The inclusion criteria were (i) articles containing data regarding frequencies of BRAF mutations, RET/PTC rearrangements or RAS mutations in PTCs or classical PTCs which had been histologically confirmed, (ii) articles containing data regarding frequencies of RAS mutations in follicular variant PTCs (FVPTCs) or (iii) articles comparing the clinicopathological characteristics of PTCs between different time periods. We excluded studies that (i) did not provide the locations or institutions where the patients with PTC were recruited or treated, (ii) focused only on a histological variant (with two exceptions described in the inclusion criteria) or a clinicopathological factor (e.g. pediatric PTCs, multifocal PTCs or recurrent PTCs), (iii) involved radiation-induced PTCs unless the study had a mixed population of radiation-induced and sporadic PTCs with the sporadic PTC data reported separately, (iv) were experimental or in vitro in nature, (v) were case reports, conference presentations, posters, proceeding papers, books, theses or reviews or (vi) duplicated data. If a study’s authors did not indicate where patients’ data was collected or where they were treated and all authors were from the same affiliation, the affiliation location was considered the primary place where the patients were initially treated.

Data extraction

Two teams of reviewers independently read the full text of potential articles and extracted data using a predefined data extraction form. Supervisors resolved any discrepancies during this data extraction step. We extracted the following details: name of institution, city, country, time of surgery (when the patient was admitted), patient’s age and gender, patient selection method, mutational detection method, prevalence of genetic alterations in entire PTC population and each histological variant, and clinicopathological data (histological variants, size, multiplicity, extrathyroidal extension (ETE) and TNM classification). We sought missing data from potentially eligible studies via email with the authors. If the full text did not indicate when patients received surgery and the authors did not respond to our emails, we considered time before submission date of the article as a patient’s surgical time period. Native speakers from a group of international doctors extracted data from articles not written in English, and this was further checked by Google Translate.

Data analysis

Our systematic literature review assessed several factors: 1) BRAF, RET/PTC and RAS mutational trends in classical PTCs from individual institutions; 2) BRAF mutational trends in micro PTCs from individual institutions; 3) modifications and trends of clinicopathological characteristics of PTCs from individual institutions. Selection and analysis of data for each section is described in detail below.

We compared the means and standard deviations (SD) of age and tumor size by using Student t test in GraphPad QuickCals at http://www.graphpad.com/quickcalcs/ttest1.cfm?Format=SD. For those articles in which the authors only provided median, range and the total number of patients, we estimated mean and SD values as described by Hozo et al [52]. Pearson Chi-square was used to compare the clinicopathological features and prevalence of each mutation between different periods from the same institutions. Statistical analysis was performed with the SPSS software, version 22 (Chicago, IL). A p value ≤ 0.05 was considered statistically significant.

Quality assessment and risk of bias analysis

Two investigators independently scored the quality and risk of bias of the included studies, as measured by the Quality Assessment Tool for Observational Cohort and Cross-Sectional Studies of the National Institute of Health (NIH) [28]. Disagreements in scoring was solved by discussion and consensus. The score of all 14 items marked with “yes” were calculated into percentage (inapplicable items were not taken into account). The quality rating of included studies was classified as low, fair and good if the score percentage was lower than 50%, 50% - 75% and more than 75%, respectively.

Conflicts of interest

All authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.

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