Screening Leads to Overestimated Associations of Thyroid Dysfunction and Thyroiditis with Thyroid Cancer Risk

Cancers (Basel). 2021 Oct 27;13(21):5385. doi: 10.3390/cancers13215385.

Abstract

We aimed to assess the relationships of functional thyroid disease and thyroiditis with subsequent thyroid cancer, which is controversial due to various confounders, and the effect of thyroid disease workup on this association. We used the cohort data from 2002 to 2015 (Study I, n = 28,330) and the entire data from 2002 to 2019 (Study II, n = 883,074) of the Korean National Health Insurance Service database, and performed logistic regression and subgroup analyses with various covariates. In Study I, hypothyroidism, thyroiditis, autoimmune thyroiditis, hyperthyroidism, and Graves' disease showed positive associations with thyroid cancer. In Study II, after adjustment for covariates including the number of thyroid function tests, the ORs for thyroid cancer were significantly reduced in all thyroid diseases. Hypothyroidism, thyroiditis, and autoimmune thyroiditis were positively associated (adjusted odds ratio, OR (95% confidence interval, CI) 1.28 (1.25-1.32), 1.36 (1.31-1.42), and 1.17 (1.11-1.24), respectively), whereas hyperthyroidism and Graves' disease were negatively associated with thyroid cancer (adjusted OR (95% CI) 0.80 (0.77-0.83) and 0.69 (0.65-0.74), respectively). Multiple subgroup analyses in both studies showed consistent results. In this large population-based, nationwide study, we confirmed that thyroid disease workup leads to overestimation of associations of thyroid dysfunction and thyroiditis with thyroid cancer risk.

Keywords: case-control studies; hyperthyroidism; hypothyroidism; nationwide studies; screening; thyroid cancer.