High Incidence of Thyroid Cancer in Southern Tuscany (Grosseto Province, Italy): Potential Role of Environmental Heavy Metal Pollution.
Marco CapezzoneMassimo Tosti BalducciEugenia Maria MorabitoCosimo DurantePaolo PiacentiniLiborio TorregrossaGabriele MaterazziGiacomo GiubboliniVirginia ManciniMaja RossiMassimo AlessandriAlessandra CartocciPublished in: Biomedicines (2023)
The incidence of thyroid cancer (TC) in Italy is one of the highest in Europe, and the reason for this is unclear. The intra-country heterogeneity of TC incidence suggests the possibility of an overdiagnosis phenomenon, although environmental factors cannot be excluded. The aim of our study is to evaluate the TC incidence trend in southern Tuscany, Italy, an area with particular geological characteristics, where the pollution and subsequent deterioration of various environmental matrices with potentially toxic elements (heavy metals) introduced from either geological or anthropogenic (human activities) sources are documented. The Tuscany cancer registry (ISPRO) provided us with the number of cases and EU standardized incidence rates (IR) of TC patients for all three provinces of southeast Tuscany (Siena, Grosseto, Arezzo) during the period of 2013-2016. In addition, we examined the histological records of 226 TC patients. We observed that the TC incidence rates for both sexes observed in Grosseto Province were significantly higher than those observed in the other two provinces. The increase was mostly due to the papillary (PTC) histotype (92% of cases), which presented aggressive variants in 37% of PTCs and tumor diameters more than 1 cm in 71.3% of cases. We demonstrated a high incidence of TC in Grosseto province, especially among male patients, that could be influenced by the presence of environmental heavy metal pollution.
Keyphrases
- heavy metals
- risk factors
- end stage renal disease
- risk assessment
- ejection fraction
- human health
- newly diagnosed
- health risk assessment
- chronic kidney disease
- health risk
- south africa
- prognostic factors
- endothelial cells
- gene expression
- particulate matter
- dna methylation
- patient reported outcomes
- copy number
- sewage sludge
- patient reported
- papillary thyroid