A benign encapsulated tumour of the thyroid gland that is surrounded by a thin fibrous capsule
Aetiology
- More commonly found in women
- Increases in incidence with increasing age
- Increased incidence in regions of iodine deficiency
Genetic factors
- <20% have a mutant ras or PIK3CA
- Functional adenomas have an activating mutation in the TSHR signalling pathway → increased cAMP
- N-ras and K-ras mutations have been implicated in the evolution of follicular adenoma to follicular carcinoma
Pathophysiology
- Usually non-functional
- Around 1% develop into a toxic adenoma - produces thyroid hormone autonomously
- FA histology shows neoplastic thyroid follicles encapsulated by a surrounding collagen cuff
Clinical presentation
- Discrete solitary mass in anotherwise normal thyroid gland
- May be incidental finding
- Patients with larger tumours may present with local symptoms e.g. dysphagia
Investigations
- US scan
- FNA - cannot distinguish between follicular adenoma and follicular carcinoma
- Serum TSH
Management
- Lobectomy with biopsy is required for treatment and definitive diagnosis as FNA cannot distinguish between follicular adenoma and follicular carcinoma