OVERVIEW: Distant metastases (DM) are the major cause of death in patients with differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC). This study aimed to investigate the predictors of DM-associated mortality. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We identified 154 thyroid cancer (TC) patients with DM from our institution's tumor registry. We excluded anaplastic (n = 21) and medullary TC (n = 32) and patients with inadequate data (n = 15). The remaining 86 patients with DTC were studied. These include 57 females (66.3%) and 29 males (33.7%) with a median age of 53.5 years [interquartile range (IQR) 45-65]. All patients underwent thyroidectomy
58 (67.4%) had neck dissection, and 81 (94.2%) received radioactive iodine (I-131) ablation/therapy. RESULTS: Lung metastases were the most common, occurring in 91.9%
skeletal metastases occurred in 58.1%, brain metastases in 9.3%, and multiple-organ DM in 58%. The management of DM included surgery, 1 or more doses of I-131, external beam radiotherapy, and multikinase inhibitors. Over a median follow-up of 84 months (IQR 35.5-118) for the whole cohort, 47 patients succumbed to their disease (disease-specific mortality 54.7%). Factors associated with mortality were increasing age ( CONCLUSION: DM from DTC are associated with ∼ 55% mortality at a median survival of 47 months. Increasing age and skeletal metastases are predictors of an increased risk of mortality.