Clinical Aspects of Primary Thyroid Lymphoma: Diagnosis and Treatment Based on Our Experience of 119 Cases

Abstract
We describe the clinical aspects of primary thyroid lymphoma, particularly diagnostic procedures and successful therapy based on our observation of 119 patients with primary thyroid lymphoma. Thyroid lymphoma occurred exclusively in the thyroid gland of patients with Hashimoto's thyroiditis as a rapidly growing mass in the thyroid gland. Therefore, progressively enlarging goiter and compression symptoms were the most common clinical manifestations. A significant number of patients in our series had subclinical hypothyroidism (14%) or overt hypothyroidism (27%) because of the coexistence of Hashimoto's thyroiditis. Whenever thyroid lymphoma is suspected, we recommend an ultrasound scan of the thyroid gland and fine needle aspiration biopsy as initial diagnostic procedures. Thyroid ultrasound showed characteristic asymmetrical pseudocystic pattern in 43 of the 46 patients (93%), and thyroid cytologic examination showed abundant monomorphic infiltration of lymphoid cells. Among 83 patients who underwent fine needle aspiration biopsy, 65 patients (78.3%) were diagnosed correctly and 10 patients (12%) had borderline cytologic results. Thus, 90% of patients with thyroid lymphoma were diagnosed or the diagnosis suspected based on fine needle aspiration biopsy. To confirm the diagnosis of lymphoma histologically and to determine the degree of malignancy, open biopsy taking 2-3 g tissue should be done for all cases. Treatment of thyroid lymphoma does not require resection of all lymphoma tissue or total thyroidectomy. Our successful treatment is radiation therapy combined with six courses of CHOP chemotherapy (cyclophosphamide, adriamycin, vincristine, prednisolone). This mode of therapy improved the 8-year survival rate to nearly 100% regardless of the histological type of malignancy.