Litcius/Paper detail

Emerging Biomarkers in Thyroid Practice and Research

Shipra Agarwal, Andrey Bychkov, Chan Kwon Jung

2021Cancers84 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Thyroid cancer is the most common endocrine malignancy. Recent developments in molecular biological techniques have led to a better understanding of the pathogenesis and clinical behavior of thyroid neoplasms. This has culminated in the updating of thyroid tumor classification, including the re-categorization of existing and introduction of new entities. In this review, we discuss various molecular biomarkers possessing diagnostic, prognostic, predictive and therapeutic roles in thyroid cancer. A comprehensive account of epigenetic dysregulation, including DNA methylation, the function of various microRNAs and long non-coding RNAs, germline mutations determining familial occurrence of medullary and non-medullary thyroid carcinoma, and single nucleotide polymorphisms predisposed to thyroid tumorigenesis has been provided. In addition to novel immunohistochemical markers, including those for neuroendocrine differentiation, and next-generation immunohistochemistry (BRAF V600E, RAS, TRK, and ALK), the relevance of well-established markers, such as Ki-67, in current clinical practice has also been discussed. A tumor microenvironment (PD-L1, CD markers) and its influence in predicting responses to immunotherapy in thyroid cancer and the expanding arena of techniques, including liquid biopsy based on circulating nucleic acids and plasma-derived exosomes as a non-invasive technique for patient management, are also summarized.

Topics & Concepts

Thyroid cancerMedullary thyroid cancerMedicineCarcinogenesisThyroidMalignancyThyroid carcinomaThyroid nodulesCancer researchPathologyExosomeMolecular pathologymicroRNAEpigeneticsLiquid biopsyCancerBiologyInternal medicineMicrovesiclesGeneticsGeneThyroid Cancer Diagnosis and TreatmentFerroptosis and cancer prognosis