1.Korean Thyroid Association Guidelines on the Management of Differentiated Thyroid Cancers; Part III. Management of Advanced Differentiated Thyroid Cancers - Chapter 1-2. Locally Recurred/Persistent Thyroid Cancer Management Strategies 2024
Ho-Ryun WON ; Min Kyoung LEE ; Ho-Cheol KANG ; Bon Seok KOO ; Hyungju KWON ; Sun Wook KIM ; Won Woong KIM ; Jung-Han KIM ; Young Joo PARK ; Jun-Ook PARK ; Young Shin SONG ; Seung Hoon WOO ; Chang Hwan RYU ; Eun Kyung LEE ; Joon-Hyop LEE ; Ji Ye LEE ; Cho Rok LEE ; Dong-Jun LIM ; Jae-Yol LIM ; Yun Jae CHUNG ; Kyorim BACK ; Dong Gyu NA ;
International Journal of Thyroidology 2024;17(1):147-152
These guidelines aim to establish the standard practice for diagnosing and treating patients with differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC). Based on the Korean Thyroid Association (KTA) Guidelines on DTC management, the “Treatment of Advanced DTC” section was revised in 2024 and has been provided through this chapter. Especially, this chapter covers surgical and nonsurgical treatments for the local (previous surgery site) or regional (cervical lymph node metastasis) recurrences. After drafting the guidelines, it was finalized by collecting opinions from KTA members and related societies. Surgical resection is the preferred treatment for local or regional recurrence of advanced DTC. If surgical resection is not possible, nonsurgical resection treatment under ultrasonography guidance may be considered as an alternative treatment for local or regional recurrence of DTC. Furthermore, if residual lesions are suspected even after surgical resection or respiratory-digestive organ invasion, additional radioactive iodine and external radiation treatments are considered.
2.Korean Thyroid Association Guidelines on the Management of Differentiated Thyroid Cancers; Part I. Initial Management of Differentiated Thyroid Cancers - Chapter 3. Perioperative Assessment of Surgical Complications 2024
Chang Hwan RYU ; Ho-Cheol KANG ; Bon Seok KOO ; Sun Wook KIM ; Dong Gyu NA ; Young Joo PARK ; Jun-Ook PARK ; Young Shin SONG ; Seung Hoon WOO ; Ho-Ryun WON ; Sihoon LEE ; Eun Kyung LEE ; Dong-Jun LIM ; Yun Kyung JEON ; Yun Jae CHUNG ; Jae-Yol LIM ; A Ram HONG ;
International Journal of Thyroidology 2024;17(1):53-60
Thyroid surgery complications include voice change, vocal fold paralysis, and hypoparathyroidism. The voice status should be evaluated pre- and post-surgery. In patients with voice change, laryngeal visualization is needed.Intraoperative neuromonitoring helps reduce recurrent laryngeal nerve injury. The measurement of serum calcium, parathyroid hormone, and 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels is recommended to evaluate perioperative parathyroid function and prescribe supplementation preoperatively if necessary. For postoperative hypoparathyroidism, vitamin D and oral calcium supplementation are indicated based on serum parathyroid hormone and calcium levels and the severity of symptoms or signs of hypocalcemia. If long-term treatment is required, the appropriateness of treatment should be evaluated based on the disease itself and the consideration of potential benefits and harms from long-term replacement.
3.Korean Thyroid Association Guidelines on the Management of Differentiated Thyroid Cancers; Part V. Pediatric Differentiated Thyroid Cancer 2024
Jung-Eun MOON ; So Won OH ; Ho-Cheol KANG ; Bon Seok KOO ; Keunyoung KIM ; Sun Wook KIM ; Won Woong KIM ; Jung-Han KIM ; Dong Gyu NA ; Sohyun PARK ; Young Joo PARK ; Jun-Ook PARK ; Ji-In BANG ; Kyorim BACK ; Youngduk SEO ; Young Shin SONG ; Seung Hoon WOO ; Ho-Ryun WON ; Chang Hwan RYU ; Sang-Woo LEE ; Eun Kyung LEE ; Joon-Hyop LEE ; Jieun LEE ; Cho Rok LEE ; Dong-Jun LIM ; Jae-Yol LIM ; Ari CHONG ; Yun Jae CHUNG ; Chae Moon HONG ; Hyungju KWON ; Young Ah LEE ;
International Journal of Thyroidology 2024;17(1):193-207
Pediatric differentiated thyroid cancers (DTCs), mostly papillary thyroid cancer (PTC, 80-90%), are diagnosed at more advanced stages with larger tumor sizes and higher rates of locoregional and/or lung metastasis. Despite the higher recurrence rates of pediatric cancers than of adult thyroid cancers, pediatric patients demonstrate a lower mortality rate and more favorable prognosis. Considering the more advanced stage at diagnosis in pediatric patients, preoperative evaluation is crucial to determine the extent of surgery required. Furthermore, if hereditary tumor syndrome is suspected, genetic testing is required. Recommendations for pediatric DTCs focus on the surgical principles, radioiodine therapy according to the postoperative risk level, treatment and follow-up of recurrent or persistent diseases, and treatment of patients with radioiodine-refractory PTCs on the basis of genetic drivers that are unique to pediatric patients.
4.Korean Thyroid Association Guidelines on the Management of Differentiated Thyroid Cancers; Overview and Summary 2024
Young Joo PARK ; Eun Kyung LEE ; Young Shin SONG ; Bon Seok KOO ; Hyungju KWON ; Keunyoung KIM ; Mijin KIM ; Bo Hyun KIM ; Won Gu KIM ; Won Bae KIM ; Won Woong KIM ; Jung-Han KIM ; Hee Kyung KIM ; Hee Young NA ; Shin Je MOON ; Jung-Eun MOON ; Sohyun PARK ; Jun-Ook PARK ; Ji-In BANG ; Kyorim BACK ; Youngduk SEO ; Dong Yeob SHIN ; Su-Jin SHIN ; Hwa Young AHN ; So Won OH ; Seung Hoon WOO ; Ho-Ryun WON ; Chang Hwan RYU ; Jee Hee YOON ; Ka Hee YI ; Min Kyoung LEE ; Sang-Woo LEE ; Seung Eun LEE ; Sihoon LEE ; Young Ah LEE ; Joon-Hyop LEE ; Ji Ye LEE ; Jieun LEE ; Cho Rok LEE ; Dong-Jun LIM ; Jae-Yol LIM ; Yun Kyung JEON ; Kyong Yeun JUNG ; Ari CHONG ; Yun Jae CHUNG ; Chan Kwon JUNG ; Kwanhoon JO ; Yoon Young CHO ; A Ram HONG ; Chae Moon HONG ; Ho-Cheol KANG ; Sun Wook KIM ; Woong Youn CHUNG ; Do Joon PARK ; Dong Gyu NA ;
International Journal of Thyroidology 2024;17(1):1-20
Differentiated thyroid cancer demonstrates a wide range of clinical presentations, from very indolent cases to those with an aggressive prognosis. Therefore, diagnosing and treating each cancer appropriately based on its risk status is important. The Korean Thyroid Association (KTA) has provided and amended the clinical guidelines for thyroid cancer management since 2007. The main changes in this revised 2024 guideline include 1) individualization of surgical extent according to pathological tests and clinical findings, 2) application of active surveillance in low-risk papillary thyroid microcarcinoma, 3) indications for minimally invasive surgery, 4) adoption of World Health Organization pathological diagnostic criteria and definition of terminology in Korean, 5) update on literature evidence of recurrence risk for initial risk stratification, 6) addition of the role of molecular testing, 7) addition of definition of initial risk stratification and targeting thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) concentrations according to ongoing risk stratification (ORS), 8) addition of treatment of perioperative hypoparathyroidism, 9) update on systemic chemotherapy, and 10) addition of treatment for pediatric patients with thyroid cancer.
5.Korean Thyroid Association Guidelines on the Management of Differentiated Thyroid Cancers; Part I. Initial Management of Differentiated Thyroid Cancers - Chapter 2. Surgical Management of Thyroid Cancer 2024
Yoon Young CHO ; Cho Rok LEE ; Ho-Cheol KANG ; Bon Seok KOO ; Hyungju KWON ; Sun Wook KIM ; Won Woong KIM ; Jung-Han KIM ; Dong Gyu NA ; Young Joo PARK ; Kyorim BACK ; Young Shin SONG ; Seung Hoon WOO ; Ho-Ryun WON ; Chang Hwan RYU ; Jee Hee YOON ; Min Kyoung LEE ; Eun Kyung LEE ; Joon-Hyop LEE ; Ji Ye LEE ; Dong-Jun LIM ; Jae-Yol LIM ; Yun Jae CHUNG ; Chan Kwon JUNG ; Jun-Ook PARK ; Hee Kyung KIM ;
International Journal of Thyroidology 2024;17(1):30-52
The primary objective of initial treatment for thyroid cancer is minimizing treatment-related side effects and unnecessary interventions while improving patients’ overall and disease-specific survival rates, reducing the risk of disease persistence or recurrence, and conducting accurate staging and recurrence risk analysis. Appropriate surgical treatment is the most important requirement for this purpose, and additional treatments including radioactive iodine therapy and thyroid-stimulating hormone suppression therapy are performed depending on the patients’ staging and recurrence risk. Diagnostic surgery may be considered when repeated pathologic tests yield nondiagnostic results (Bethesda category 1) or atypia of unknown significance (Bethesda category 3), depending on clinical risk factors, nodule size, ultrasound findings, and patient preference. If a follicular neoplasm (Bethesda category 4) is diagnosed pathologically, surgery is the preferred option. For suspicious papillary carcinoma (suspicious for malignancy, Bethesda category 5), surgery is considered similar to a diagnosis of malignancy (Bethesda category 6). As for the extent of surgery, if the cancer is ≤1 cm in size and clinically free of extrathyroidal extension (ETE) (cT1a), without evidence of cervical lymph node (LN) metastasis (cN0), and without obvious reason to resect the contralateral lobe, a lobectomy can be performed. If the cancer is 1-2 cm in size, clinically free of ETE (cT1b), and without evidence of cervical LN metastasis (cN0), lobectomy is the preferred option. For patients with clinically evident ETE to major organs (cT4) or with cervical LN metastasis (cN1) or distant metastasis (M1), regardless of the cancer size, total thyroidectomy and complete cancer removal should be performed at the time of initial surgery. Active surveillance may be considered for adult patients diagnosed with low-risk thyroid papillary microcarcinoma. Endoscopic and robotic thyroidectomy may be performed for low-risk differentiated thyroid cancer when indicated, based on patient preference.
6.Clinical Results of Drug-Coated Balloon Treatment in a Large-Scale Multicenter Korean Registry Study
Sang Yeub LEE ; Yun-Kyeong CHO ; Sang-Wook KIM ; Young-Joon HONG ; Bon-Kwon KOO ; Jang-Whan BAE ; Seung-Hwan LEE ; Tae Hyun YANG ; Hun Sik PARK ; Si Wan CHOI ; Do-Sun LIM ; Soo-Joong KIM ; Young Hoon JEONG ; Hyun-Jong LEE ; Kwan Yong LEE ; Eun-Seok SHIN ; Ung KIM ; Moo Hyun KIM ; Chang-Wook NAM ; Seung-Ho HUR ; Doo-Il KIM ;
Korean Circulation Journal 2022;52(6):444-454
Background and Objectives:
The aim of this study was to demonstrate the efficacy and safety of treatment with drug-coated balloon (DCB) in a large real-world population.
Methods:
Patients treated with DCBs were included in a multicenter observational registry that enrolled patients from 18 hospitals in Korea between January 2009 and December 2017. The primary outcome was target lesion failure (TLF) defined as a composite of cardiovascular death, target vessel myocardial infarction, and clinically indicated target lesion revascularization at 12 months.
Results:
The study included 2,509 patients with 2,666 DCB-treated coronary artery lesions (1,688 [63.3%] with in-stent restenosis [ISR] lesions vs. 978 [36.7%] with de novo lesions).The mean age with standard deviation was 65.7±11.3 years; 65.7% of the patients were men.At 12 months, the primary outcome, TLF, occurred in 179 (6.7%), 151 (8.9%), 28 (2.9%) patients among the total, ISR, and de novo lesion populations, respectively. A history of hypertension, diabetes, acute coronary syndrome, previous coronary artery bypass graft, reduced left ventricular ejection fraction, B2C lesion and ISR lesion were independent predictors of 12 months TLF in the overall study population.
Conclusions
This large multicenter DCB registry study revealed the favorable clinical outcome of DCB treatment in real-world practice in patient with ISR lesion as well as small de novo coronary lesion.
7.Clinical Outcomes in Patients with Deferred Coronary Lesions according to Disease Severity Assessed by Fractional Flow Reserve.
Ki Bum WON ; Chang Wook NAM ; Yun Kyeong CHO ; Hyuck Jun YOON ; Hyoung Seob PARK ; Hyungseop KIM ; Seongwook HAN ; Seung Ho HUR ; Yoon Nyun KIM ; Sang Hyun PARK ; Jung Kyu HAN ; Bon Kwon KOO ; Hyo Soo KIM ; Joon Hyung DOH ; Sung Yun LEE ; Hyoung Mo YANG ; Hong Seok LIM ; Myeong Ho YOON ; Seung Jea TAHK ; Kwon Bae KIM
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2016;31(12):1929-1936
Data on the clinical outcomes in deferred coronary lesions according to functional severity have been limited. This study evaluated the clinical outcomes of deferred lesions according to fractional flow reserve (FFR) grade using Korean FFR registry data. Among 1,294 patients and 1,628 lesions in Korean FFR registry, 665 patients with 781 deferred lesions were included in this study. All participants were consecutively categorized into 4 groups according to FFR; group 1: ≥ 0.96 (n = 56), group 2: 0.86–0.95 (n = 330), group 3: 0.81–0.85 (n = 170), and group 4: ≤ 0.80 (n = 99). Primary endpoint was major adverse cardiac events (MACE), a composite of all-cause death, myocardial infarction, and target vessel revascularization. The median follow-up period was 2.1 years. During follow-up, the incidence of MACE in groups 1–4 was 1.8%, 7.6%, 8.8%, and 13.1%, respectively. Compared to group 1, the cumulative rate by Kaplan-Meier analysis of MACE was not different for groups 2 and 3. However, group 4 had higher cumulative rate of MACE compared to group 1 (log-rank P = 0.013). In the multivariate Cox hazard models, only FFR (hazard ratio [HR], 0.95; P = 0.005) was independently associated with MACE among all participants. In contrast, previous history of percutaneous coronary intervention (HR, 2.37; P = 0.023) and diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome (ACS) (HR, 2.35; P = 0.015), but not FFR, were independent predictors for MACE in subjects with non-ischemic (FFR ≥ 0.81) deferred coronary lesions. Compared to subjects with ischemic deferred lesions, clinical outcomes in subjects with non-ischemic deferred lesions according to functional severity are favorable. However, longer-term follow-up may be necessary.
Acute Coronary Syndrome
;
Coronary Artery Disease
;
Diagnosis
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Kaplan-Meier Estimate
;
Myocardial Infarction
;
Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
;
Prognosis
;
Proportional Hazards Models
8.Characteristics of Function-Anatomy Mismatch in Patients with Coronary Artery Disease.
Hyun Ok CHO ; Chang Wook NAM ; Yun Kyeong CHO ; Hyuck Jun YOON ; Hyoung Seob PARK ; Hyungseop KIM ; In Sung CHUNG ; Joon Hyung DOH ; Bon Kwon KOO ; Dae Woo HYUN ; Seung Ho HUR ; Yoon Nyun KIM ; Kwon Bae KIM
Korean Circulation Journal 2014;44(6):394-399
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Coronary lesions with mismatched functional and anatomical significance are not uncommon. We assessed the accuracy and predictors of mismatch between fractional flow reserve (FFR) and quantitative coronary angiography (QCA) analyses in patients with coronary lesions. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: A total of 643 lesions with pre-interventional FFR and QCA measurements were consecutively enrolled and divided into four groups using FFR < or =0.80 and percent diameter stenosis (%DS) > or =50% as cutoffs for functional and anatomical significance, respectively. Accordingly, FFR >0.80 and DS > or =50%, and FFR < or =0.80 and DS <50% defined false-positive (FP) and false-negative (FN) lesions, respectively. RESULTS: Overall, 40.4% (260/643) of the lesions were mismatched, and 51.7% (218/414) and 18.3% (42/229) were FP and FN lesions, respectively. In a multivariate analysis, independent predictors of FP were non-left anterior descending artery location {odds ratio (OR), 0.36; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.28-0.56; p<0.001}, shorter lesion length (OR, 0.96; 95% CI, 0.95-0.98; p<0.001), multi-vessel disease (OR, 0.47; 95% CI, 0.30-0.75; p=0.001), and larger minimal lumen diameter by QCA (OR, 2.88; 95% CI,1.65-5.00; p<0.001). Independent predictors of FN were multi-vessel disease (OR, 1.82; 95% CI, 1.24-5.27; p=0.048), aging (OR, 0.96; 95% CI, 0.93-0.99; p=0.034), smoking (OR, 0.36; 95% CI, 0.14-0.93; p=0.034), and smaller reference vessel diameter by QCA (OR, 0.30; 95% CI, 0.10-0.87; p=0.026). CONCLUSION: A mismatch between FFR and angiographic lesion severity is not rare in patients with coronary artery disease; therefore, an angiography-guided evaluation could under- or over-estimate lesion severity in specific lesion subsets.
Aging
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Arteries
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Constriction, Pathologic
;
Coronary Angiography
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Coronary Artery Disease*
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Fractional Flow Reserve, Myocardial
;
Humans
;
Multivariate Analysis
;
Smoke
;
Smoking
9.Clinical Characteristics of a Nationwide Hospital-based Registry of Mild-to-Moderate Alzheimer's Disease Patients in Korea: A CREDOS (Clinical Research Center for Dementia of South Korea) Study.
Hee Kyung PARK ; Duk L NA ; Seol Heui HAN ; Ji Young KIM ; Hae Kwan CHEONG ; Seong Yoon KIM ; Sang Yun KIM ; Chang Hyung HONG ; Do Kwan KIM ; Bon D KU ; So Young MOON ; Jun Young LEE ; Yong S SHIM ; Young Chul YOUN ; Eun Joo KIM ; Beoung Chae KIM ; Kee Hyung PARK ; Kyung R CHA ; Sang Won SEO ; Jae Hong LEE
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2011;26(9):1219-1226
With rapid population aging, the socioeconomic burden caused by dementia care is snowballing. Although a few community-based studies of Alzheimer's disease (AD) have been performed in Korea, there has never been a nationwide hospital-based study thereof. We aimed to identify the demographics and clinical characteristics of mild-to-moderate AD patients from the Clinical Research Center for Dementia of Korea (CREDOS) registry. A total of 1,786 patients were consecutively included from September 2005 to June 2010. Each patient underwent comprehensive neurological examination, interview for caregivers, laboratory investigations, neuropsychological tests, and brain MRI. The mean age was 74.0 yr and the female percentage 67.0%. The mean period of education was 7.1 yr and the frequency of early-onset AD (< 65 yr old) was 18.8%. Among the vascular risk factors, hypertension (48.9%) and diabetes mellitus (22.3%) were the most frequent. The mean score of the Korean version of Mini-Mental State Examination (K-MMSE) was 19.2 and the mean sum of box scores of Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR-SB) 5.1. Based on the well-structured, nationwide, and hospital-based registry, this study provides the unique clinical characteristics of AD and emphasizes the importance of vascular factors in AD in Korea.
Aged
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Aged, 80 and over
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Alzheimer Disease/complications/*diagnosis
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Brain/radionuclide imaging
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Caregivers
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Dementia/diagnosis
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Demography
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Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/etiology
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Female
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Hospitals
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Humans
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Hypertension/etiology
;
Interviews as Topic
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Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Male
;
Middle Aged
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Questionnaires
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*Registries
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Republic of Korea
;
Risk Factors
10.Fractional Flow Reserve Versus Angiography in Left Circumflex Ostial Intervention After Left Main Crossover Stenting.
Chang Wook NAM ; Seung Ho HUR ; Bon Kwon KOO ; Joon Hyung DOH ; Yun Kyeong CHO ; Hyoung Seob PARK ; Hyuck Jun YOON ; Hyungseop KIM ; In Sung CHUNG ; Yoon Nyun KIM ; William F FEARON ; Seung Jae TAHK ; Kwon Bae KIM
Korean Circulation Journal 2011;41(6):304-307
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Discrepancy between angiographic percent (%) diameter stenosis and fractional flow reserve (FFR) exists in non-left main bifurcation lesions. The aim of this study was to compare angiographic stenosis severity and FFR in jailed ostial left circumflex artery (LCX) lesions after left main (LM)-to-left anterior descending artery (LAD) crossover stenting. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Twenty-nine (n=29) patients with distal LM or ostial LAD lesions treated by LM-to-LAD crossover stenting were consecutively enrolled. After successful stenting, FFR was measured at the jailed LCX. Additional intervention was performed in lesions with FFR <0.8. RESULTS: The mean reference diameter of LCX was 3.1+/-0.4 mm, and percent diameter stenosis after crossover stenting was 56+/-21%. Angiographically significant stenosis (>50%) at the ostial LCX occurred in 59% (17/29) of cases. Among them, only five (29%) lesions had functional significance, and underwent additional procedure. During follow-up, three patients in the deferral group and two patients in the additional intervention group had target lesion revascularization. CONCLUSION: There was a discrepancy between angiographic percent diameter stenosis and FFR in jailed LCX lesions after LM crossover stenting.
Angiography
;
Arteries
;
Constriction, Pathologic
;
Coronary Disease
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Humans
;
Stents

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