2013年12月

A patient’s message from Turkey

2013/12/25

Dear Dr Kakudo
I wanted to write to you about how I feel on your second opinion diagnosis. For people who will read this story for the first time I would like to simply explain my situation. I’m a male at my 37. I had lobectomy operation due to a thyroid nodule of 2.7cm in size at my left thyroid lobe. Pathology report after surgery said “Follicular Variant of Papillary Carcinoma” and I was advised to go for completion surgery and radioactive iodine (RI) treatment.
After reading many articles including yours about borderline lesions I started to question if surgery was the best option for my health or not. Then I started to follow “thyroid cancer survivors association group” at “inspire.com”. Following this site gave me a better understanding of how people feel without thyroid gland, short and long term side effects. And based on an advice from a friend from that group I decided to contact you and you kindly accepted to give me your second opinion.
Your diagnosis result says “findings are incomplete and do not fulfill histopathologic criteria for either follicular carcinoma or papillary carcinoma”. And this type of tumor are “practically benign after simple excision”. This difference in opinion obviously makes a big change for management of the disease. No need for completion surgery and no need for RI treatment.
As a patient going through all this on one hand I feel lucky because it’s not a genuine cancer case where none of above mentioned discussion could be possible. I also feel lucky because I had a chance to read and better understand risks and downsides of surgery and RI treatment before deciding anything further. On the other hand not going down that road may have other risks in specific cases and today we are not 100% sure about long term outcome for each individual. However statistically there is a strong evidence that we are almost 100% sure (your study shows 0,03% missing malignancy judging) there will be no recurrence or distant metastasis.
Reflecting on my case and many others it’s clear to me that there is a difference in opinion between pathologists and this has a direct impact on management of the disease. Important point to me is to give enough information to patients so that they can make their own decisions. Not just say this is your problem and this is the one and only solution. Take it or not! I could have felt much better if risks of surgery and RI and not doing that was explained to me objectively. At the end it’s my life and I have to make a decision. Why should I have to find out difficulties in diagnosis and even classification of borderline lesions by myself? How many people will (be able to) do what I did? And how many people will just do what is told? Therefore how many people will possibly be treated for nothing? And their quality of life and feeling about their health is impacted adversely for the rest of their lives.
I hope answers to above questions will be discussed more and more in the coming years. And until we find a clear method to identify what is definitely malignant and what is not I hope doctors around the world will give more information to their patients and explain real difficulty to make this identification. And let people decide what is best for themselves.
Finally I want to say thank you for your second opinion diagnosis which made a big change in my life. And a big thank you for your life time studies and sharing what you believe is right to make a change in people’s lives.

category: 患者の方へ , 臨床医の方へ comment: (0)

ResearchGate(Kennichi Kakud) Better Treatment 最適医療 (社) 日本病理学会 教育委員会編集 病理コア画像 和歌山県立医科大学人体病理学(第2病理学)教室 バーチャル臨床甲状腺カレッジ