RESUMO
The authors report 20 cases of medullary thyroid carcinoma over the period from 1980 to 2000. Two patients turned out to be inoperable and 18 patients underwent total thyroidectomy, associated with dissection of the central lymphatic compartment in 5 patients and with dissection of the central and lateral lymphatic compartments in 10 patients with clinical or instrumental evidence of cervical lymphadenomegaly. Serum calcitonin levels proved to be a reliable marker for the diagnosis of persistence or recurrence of the disease. The follow-up, lasting from 1 to 208 months, demonstrated that in 7 cases in which serum levels of calcitonin underwent normalization there was no recurrence of disease. Among 11 cases with persistence of high calcitonin levels, 6 died and only 2 presented no evidence of metastases. On the basis of our analysis of the cases reported, total thyroidectomy associated with dissection of the central lymphatic compartment is an adequate treatment for patients in stages I and II. The authors regard routine dissection of the lateral lymphatic compartment as unadvisable.