Risk Factors for Thyroid cancer
List of Risk Factors for Thyroid cancer
The list of risk factors mentioned for Thyroid cancer in various sources includes:
Risk factors discussion:
Thyroid Disease: NWHIC (Excerpt)
Although anyone can get thyroid cancer, people who as
children received head or neck x-ray treatments for tonsillitis or other
conditions (generally from the 1920s to 1960s) are more at risk. (Source: excerpt from Thyroid Disease: NWHIC)
What You Need To Know About Thyroid Cancer: NCI (Excerpt)
The following risk factors are associated with an increased
chance of developing thyroid cancer:
-
Radiation .
People exposed to high levels of radiation are much more
likely than others to develop papillary or follicular
thyroid cancer.
One important source of radiation exposure is treatment
with x-rays .
Between the 1920s and the 1950s, doctors used high-dose
x-rays to treat children who had enlarged tonsils, acne, and
other problems affecting the head and neck. Later,
scientists found that some people who had received this kind
of treatment developed thyroid cancer. (Routine diagnostic
x-rays -- such as dental x-rays or chest x-rays -- use very
small doses of radiation. Their benefits nearly always
outweigh their risks. However, repeated exposure could be
harmful, so it is a good idea for people to talk with their
dentist and doctor about the need for each x-ray and to ask
about the use of shields to protect other parts of the
body.)
Another source of radiation is radioactive
fallout . This includes fallout from atomic weapons
testing (such as the testing in the United States and
elsewhere in the world, mainly in the 1950s and 1960s),
nuclear power plant accidents (such as the Chornobyl [also
called Chernobyl] accident in 1986), and releases from
atomic weapons production plants (such as the Hanford
facility in Washington state in the late 1940s). Such
radioactive fallout contains radioactive
iodine (I-131). People who were exposed to one or
more sources of I-131, especially if they were children at
the time of their exposure, may have an increased risk for
thyroid diseases.
People who are concerned about their exposure to
radiation from medical treatments or radioactive fallout may
wish to ask the Cancer Information Service at 1-800-4-CANCER
about additional sources of information.
-
Family history. Medullary thyroid cancer can be
caused by a change, or alteration, in a gene
called RET. The altered RET gene can be passed from parent
to child. Nearly everyone with the altered RET gene will
develop medullary thyroid cancer. A blood test can detect an
altered RET gene. If the abnormal gene is found in a person
with medullary thyroid cancer, the doctor may suggest that
family members be tested. For those found to carry the
altered RET gene, the doctor may recommend frequent lab
tests or surgery
to remove the thyroid before cancer develops. When medullary
thyroid cancer runs in a family, the doctor may call this
"familial medullary thyroid cancer" or "multiple
endocrine neoplasia (MEN) syndrome ." People with the
MEN syndrome tend to develop certain other types of cancer.
A small number of people with a family history of goiter
or certain precancerous
polyps in the colon
are at risk for developing papillary thyroid cancer.
-
Being female. In the United States, women are two
to three times more likely than men to develop thyroid
cancer.
-
Age. Most patients with thyroid cancer are more
than 40 years old. People with anaplastic thyroid cancer are
usually more than 65 years old.
-
Race. In the United States, white people are more
likely than African Americans to be diagnosed with thyroid
cancer.
-
Not enough iodine in the diet. The thyroid needs
iodine to make thyroid hormone. In the United States, iodine
is added to salt to protect people from thyroid problems.
Thyroid cancer seems to be less common in the United States
than in countries where iodine is not part of the
diet.
Most people who have known risk factors do not get thyroid
cancer. On the other hand, many who do get the disease have
none of these risk factors. People who think they may be at
risk for thyroid cancer should discuss this concern with their
doctor. The doctor may suggest ways to reduce the risk and can
plan an appropriate schedule for checkups. (Source: excerpt from What You Need To Know About Thyroid Cancer: NCI)
Risks factors for Thyroid cancer: medical news summaries:
The following medical news items
are relevant to risk factors for Thyroid cancer:
About risk factors:
Risk factors for Thyroid cancer are factors that do not seem
to be a direct cause of the disease,
but seem to be associated in some way.
Having a risk factor for Thyroid cancer
makes the chances
of getting a condition higher but does
not always lead to Thyroid cancer.
Also, the absence of any risk factors
or having a protective factor does not necessarily
guard you against getting Thyroid cancer.
For general information and a list of risk factors,
see the risk center.
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Symptoms of Thyroid cancer
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