Goiter classification

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief:

Overview

  • In 1974, an international committee of thyroid pathologists published the first WHO histological classification of thyroid tumours which had served as a basis for various clinical, pathological, and epidemiological studies

Classification

  • In 1974, an international committee of thyroid pathologists published the first WHO histological classification of thyroid tumours which had served as a basis for various clinical, pathological, and epidemiological studies. [1]
  • WHO Histological Classification of Thyroid Tumors, Second edition (1988) [1]
    • Epithelial tumors
      • Benign
        • Follicular adenoma
        • Others
      • Malignant
        • Follicular carcinoma
        • Papillary carcinoma
        • Medullary carcinoma
        • Undifferentiated (anaplastic) carcinoma
        • Others
    • Nonepithelial tumors
      • Benign
      • Malignant
    • Malignant lymphomas
    • Miscellaneous tumors
    • Secondary tumors
    • Unclassified tumors
    • Tumor-like lesions
  • Goiter may be also be classified according to various classification methods based on the following factors:
    • Etiological classification
    • Epidemiological classification
    • Anatomical classification
    • Pathological classification
    • Functional classification
    • Morphological classification

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Hedinger C, Williams ED, Sobin LH (1989). "The WHO histological classification of thyroid tumors: a commentary on the second edition". Cancer. 63 (5): 908–11. PMID 2914297.

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