Pediatric thyroid cancer is a rare condition that develops in the thyroid gland of children and adolescents, often presenting as a neck lump and requiring specialized evaluation and treatment by experienced medical providers.
What Are the Symptoms of Pediatric Thyroid Cancer?
Symptoms of this disease vary. Your child may experience:
- A lump in the neck
- Persistent swollen lymph nodes
- A tight or full feeling in the neck
- Trouble with breathing or swallowing
- Hoarseness
If any of these symptoms occur, consult your child's physician for an evaluation. The evaluation should consist of a head and neck examination to determine if unusual lumps are present. A blood test may be ordered to determine how the thyroid is functioning. Ultrasonography uses sound waves to create an image of the thyroid gland and neck contents, such as lymph nodes.
Other tests that may be warranted include a radioactive iodine scan, which provides information about the thyroid shape and function and identifies areas in the thyroid that do not absorb iodine in the normal way, or a fine needle biopsy of any abnormal lump in the thyroid or neck. Also called fine needle aspiration (FNA), a fine needle biopsy is when a needle is inserted into a lump or mass to collect a sample of cells. Sometimes it is necessary to remove a part of the tumor or one of the lobes of the thyroid gland, known as a thyroid lobectomy, for analysis to help establish a diagnosis and plan for management.




