Overview
Differentiated thyroid cancers are malignancies that arise from the follicular epithelial cells of the thyroid gland and retain many features of normal thyroid tissue, including the capacity to take up iodine and respond to thyroid-stimulating hormone. They comprise predominantly papillary thyroid carcinoma and follicular thyroid carcinoma, together accounting for the large majority of thyroid cancers, and are generally associated with a favorable prognosis and high long-term survival. Diagnosis typically begins with neck ultrasound and fine-needle aspiration cytology, increasingly supported by molecular and microRNA markers that aid risk stratification and help distinguish well-differentiated tumors from more aggressive forms. As reflected in the listed research, microRNA profiling has been examined across the spectrum from differentiated to poorly differentiated and anaplastic carcinoma, illustrating how molecular signatures track loss of differentiation. Management is centered on surgery, most often thyroidectomy, and on the use of radioactive iodine ablation to eliminate residual or metastatic iodine-avid disease, complemented by thyroid-stimulating-hormone suppression to reduce recurrence. Treatment outcomes for well-differentiated disease are generally excellent, though extent of surgery and use of radioactive iodine are individualized according to risk. Differentiated thyroid cancers contrast sharply with poorly differentiated and anaplastic carcinomas, which lose differentiated features, lose iodine avidity, behave far more aggressively and carry a substantially worse prognosis.
Research published in this journal
11 peer-reviewed articles, ranked by relevance. Each links to its DOI.
Molecular Diagnosis in Clinical Management and Diagnosis of Thyroid Cancer
MicroRNA Profiling of Differentiated, Poorly Differentiated and Anaplastic Thyroid Carcinoma, a Comparative Approach
Medullary Thyroid Cancer: Is the Adequacy of Pre-Operative Evaluation Influenced by Training Background?
Outcomes of Differentiated Thyroid Cancer Patients Treated with Surgery and Radioactive Iodine at SQCCCRC
Thyroid Transcription Factor-1 Activity is Required for the Proliferation of Human Thyroid Cancer Cells 8505C
Secular Trend in the Incidence of Japanese Employees with Thyroid Cancer Undergoing Thyroidectomy from 2005 to 2014: a Retrospective Descriptive Study Using an Employment-Based Insurance Claims Database
Evaluation of Household Radiation Exposure and Safety after Ambulatory Radioiodine Ablation Therapy
Image Guided Ablations for Thyroid Tumours
Leiomyosarcoma of the Thyroid Gland: A Review of the Literature and our Experience
In The Pursuit of The Perfect Thyroid Care
How this research is being cited
The 11 articles above have been cited 20 times in the scholarly literature. Citation data via OpenAlex and Crossref, updated Jun 2026.
-
Wan Nabila Wan Mansor et al. · 2023 · The Egyptian Journal of Otolaryngology
-
2023 · The Egyptian Journal of Otolaryngology
-
2023 · Journal of Thyroid Cancer
-
2022 · Cancers
-
M. Kaur et al. · 2022 · Indian Journal of Pathology and Microbiology
-
2022 · Cancers
-
2022 · Indian Journal of Pathology and Microbiology
-
2022 · Medical & Clinical Research
A sample of recent works citing this journal's research on Differentiated Thyroid Cancers, linking to each citing work.