Probably. Also, Kebebeu is at Stanford now. |
+1 I have a family member with a rare stage 4 thyroid cancer and Hopkins has been amazing. |
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Douglas Ball at John’s Hopkin’s. Saved my brothers life. I see him regularly as this cancer (medullary) runs in my family. He does my biopsies. Top notch. |
PP There are three forms of thyroid cancer. Two of them are typically deadly. |
That’s not at all helpful to anyone. |
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PS—my brothers stage 4 medullary cancer in his 30s was not basic or simple. People need to stop minimizing thyroid cancer as manageable. I hope yours is easy OP. |
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Dr. Steven Evans did my wife's thyroidectomy in 2000. She's been fine ever since.
He was a bit of an egomaniac, but the day he did her surgery he said he had 8 others on the schedule. So I think it may be one of his specialities. |
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It is if folks keep minimizing thyroid cancer just because they had a “simple” case. |
85% of tc is papillary which is almost always highly curable and or treatable unless in rare cases poorly differentiated . Another about 10% is follicular which is similarly treatable. The remaining small percentage is medullary and anaplastic. Anapastic is highly aggressive and medullary is tricky. They are tbh not best understood as a ‘group’ bc they behave so differently it’s almost like different diseases altogether |
| Recently it’s been reported that this type of cancer is on the rise. |
| Dr. Avital Harari at UCLA is amazing. Thyroid cancer is her specialty. |
| Dr. W Purkert. Inova Ffx |
I wish other doctors had the bedside manners, experience and knowledge he has. |
| Have your PCP call Felger’s office for you. |
There are many experts who believe that it's really that diagnostics are much better, and that true incidence is the same for PTC. Also, there is growing evidence that papillary thyroid carcinoma is overtreated, and that many people with die with their PTC tumors, not because of them. The evidence has changed a lot on *whether* treatment is necessary (and in which circumstances active surveillance is appropriate to consider) and *how* to treat PTC. It is not standard, for example, that everyone gets radioactive iodine treatment after surgery now, for example, although that used to be prescribed for everyone. Same for a full thyroidectomy vs. a lobectomy. |