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Featured researches published by John R. Goellner.


The American Journal of Medicine | 1982

Fine-needle aspiration biopsy of thyroid nodules: Impact on thyroid practice and cost of care

Bertil Hamberger; Hossein Gharib; L. Joseph Melton; John R. Goellner; Alan R. Zinsmeister

We studied the impact of fine-needle aspiration biopsy on the management of patients with solitary thyroid nodules. Sixty-four patients were examined before the introduction of fine-needle aspiration biopsy, and 147 patients were examined after its introduction. The percentage of patients who underwent thyroid operation decreased from 67 percent to 43 percent, while the yield of carcinoma increased from 14 percent to 29 percent. Cost of medical care per patient declined by 25 percent. The results suggest that fine-needle aspiration biopsy provides valuable information to assist in the selection for surgery of patients with solitary nodules. Fine-needle aspiration appears to be safe, reliable, and cost-effective. The merits of the technique commend it for routine use in the evaluation of thyroid nodules.


Mayo Clinic Proceedings | 1985

Anaplastic Carcinoma of the Thyroid: A Clinicopathologic Study of 82 Cases

Cornelius J.C. Nel; Jon A. van Heerden; John R. Goellner; Hossein Gharib; William M. McConahey; William F. Taylor; Clive S. Grant

Anaplastic carcinoma of the thyroid accounts for about 10% to 15% of all thyroid carcinomas in the United States. Its lethality is evidenced by a 5-year survival rate of 3.6% and a median survival of 4 months. Rapid growth of a thyroid mass, frequently in a preexisting goiter, is the most common manifestation; the diagnosis should be considered and expeditiously pursued in all patients who present with this finding. Relatively favorable prognostic features seem to be unilateral tumors, a tumor diameter of less than 5 cm, no invasion of adjacent tissue, and absence of nodal involvement. For resectable lesions, thyroid lobectomy with wide margins of adjacent soft tissue on the side of the tumor seems to constitute a safe, appropriately aggressive surgical approach. Total thyroidectomy and radical neck dissection results in an increased complication rate and has no advantage over a more conservative approach. Radiotherapy, chemotherapy, immunotherapy, and combination radiotherapy and chemotherapy need further evaluation.


Mayo Clinic Proceedings | 1992

Medullary Thyroid Carcinoma: Clinicopathologic Features and Long-Term Follow-Up of 65 Patients Treated During 1946 Through 1970

Hossein Gharib; William M. McConahey; Robert D. Tiegs; Erik J. Bergstralh; John R. Goellner; Clive S. Grant; Jon A. van Heerden; Glen W. Sizemore; Ian D. Hay

We retrospectively reviewed the medical records of 65 consecutive patients with medullary thyroid carcinoma, who had had their primary surgical treatment at the Mayo Clinic during the years 1946 through 1970. Of these patients, 58 had sporadic and 7 had familial medullary thyroid carcinoma. Thyroid nodules were the most common initial manifestation. Near-total thyroidectomy was the most frequent initial operation. Survival was affected by the following factors: male sex, familial inheritance, size of the tumor, stage of the tumor (American Joint Committee on Cancer), and completeness of initial resection of the tumor. The mean duration of follow-up was 23.5 years, and the maximal follow-up was 36 years. Among 52 patients without initial distant metastatic involvement and with complete resection of the tumor, 20-year survival free of distant metastatic lesions was 81%. Overall 10- and 20-year survival rates were 63% and 44%, respectively. Because of the substantial morbidity and mortality associated with medullary thyroid carcinoma, early diagnosis and thorough initial resection of the tumor are important.


Mayo Clinic Proceedings | 1986

Fine-Needle Aspiration of the Breast

Clive S. Grant; John R. Goellner; John S. Welch; J. Kirk Martin

One of the numerous controversial issues related to the clinical management of breast cancer is the role of fine-needle aspiration (FNA). Despite its enthusiastic use in the diagnosis of thyroid nodules, its application to breast abnormalities has been accepted reluctantly. Breast FNA necessitates technical and interpretative skill and continual practice and is not 100% accurate. It also entails an additional, although moderate, expense. To assess the accuracy and determine the possible role of FNA at our institution, we performed both FNA and excisional biopsy in 100 unselected women with palpable breast nodules and correlated the cytologic and histologic findings. Our results were similar to those in previously published studies. FNA had a false-negative rate of 6%, no false-positive results, and an accuracy of 94%. After reviewing the potential assets and liabilities of this technique, we believe that breast FNA may add a measure of confidence in the diagnosis of benign breast lesions, provides a safeguard for preventing misdiagnosis of malignant lesions, and might expedite and reduce the cost of managing both primary and recurrent breast cancer.


Journal of The American Academy of Dermatology | 1997

Thyroid carcinoma metastatic to the skin: A cutaneous manifestation of a widely disseminated malignancy

Patrick R. Dahl; David G. Brodland; John R. Goellner; Ian D. Hay

BACKGROUND Cutaneous metastases develop in 2% to 9% of patients with an internal malignancy. Thyroid carcinoma metastatic to the skin is a rare clinical entity. OBJECTIVE Our purpose was to study the clinical and pathologic features and outcome in patients with cutaneous metastasis from thyroid carcinoma. METHODS The study included a retrospective analysis of six patients with skin metastases from thyroid carcinoma and a review of the English-language literature since 1964. RESULTS Including our six patients, 43 patients with skin metastases from thyroid carcinoma have been reported. Papillary carcinoma was the most common (41%), followed by follicular (28%), anaplastic (15%), and medullary carcinomas (15%). The scalp was the most common site of metastasis. For our patients, the average length of survival after diagnosis of cutaneous metastasis was 19 months. CONCLUSION Cutaneous metastasis from thyroid carcinoma is rare and occurs in the setting of disseminated neoplastic disease.


Mayo Clinic Proceedings | 1987

Leiomyosarcomas and Benign Smooth Muscle Tumors of the Stomach: Nuclear DNA Patterns Studied by Flow Cytometry

Kenichi Tsushima; Leslie M. Rainwater; John R. Goellner; Jon A. van Heerden; Michael M. Lieber

Paraffin-embedded archival tissue samples were used for determination of DNA ploidy by flow cytometry on 117 surgically resected gastric smooth muscle tumors (44 leiomyosarcomas, 53 leiomyomas, and 20 benign leiomyoblastomas). The technique of Hedley was used for preparation of paraffin-embedded tissue into single dissociated nuclei, and the method of Vindeløv was used for staining with propidium iodide. Among the 53 leiomyomas, the DNA ploidy pattern was diploid in most tumors (87%), except for 2 DNA tetraploid/polyploid and 5 DNA aneuploid samples. In comparison, the 20 benign leiomyoblastomas had more frequent abnormal DNA histograms: DNA tetraploidy/polyploidy in 5 (25%) and DNA aneuploidy in 2 (10%). The DNA histograms of the 44 leiomyosarcomas (including 4 epithelioid leiomyosarcomas) were classified as follows: 20 cases (45%) exhibited a DNA diploid pattern, 14 cases (32%) had a DNA tetraploid/polyploid pattern, and 10 cases (23%) had DNA aneuploid peaks. For the patients with leiomyosarcomas, the DNA ploidy pattern was significantly correlated with survival (P less than 0.001), as were tumor grade (P less than 0.001) and tumor size (P less than 0.05). Furthermore, both benign and malignant gastric smooth muscle tumors with DNA tetraploid/polyploid patterns were significantly larger than those with a DNA diploid histogram (P less than 0.05). DNA ploidy pattern cannot be used for diagnosis--that is, to distinguish malignant from benign gastric smooth muscle tumors. For gastric leiomyosarcomas, however, nuclear DNA ploidy pattern is an easily measured objective determination with important prognostic significance.


Surgery | 1992

Papillary thyroid microcarcinoma : a study of 535 cases observed in a 50-year period: Discussion

Ian D. Hay; C. S. Grant; J. A. Van Heerden; John R. Goellner; Janet R. Ebersold; Erik J. Bergstralh; B. Cady; Hay; R. Udelsman; P. Fabbri; M. Allo; L. Rosoff


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 1997

Frequent loss of heterozygosity on chromosomes 3p and 17p without VHL or p53 mutations suggests involvement of unidentified tumor suppressor genes in follicular thyroid carcinoma.

Stefan K. G. Grebe; Bryan McIver; Ian D. Hay; Patricia S.-C. Wu; Léa Maria Zanini Maciel; Harry A. Drabkin; John R. Goellner; Clive S. Grant; Robert B. Jenkins; Norman L. Eberhardt


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2005

PPARγ Staining as a Surrogate for PAX8/PPARγ Fusion Oncogene Expression in Follicular Neoplasms: Clinicopathological Correlation and Histopathological Diagnostic Value

Mustafa Sahin; Brandon L. Allard; Martin Yates; J. Gregory Powell; Xiao Li Wang; Ian D. Hay; Ying Zhao; John R. Goellner; Thomas J. Sebo; Stefan K. G. Grebe; Norman L. Eberhardt; Bryan McIver


World Journal of Surgery | 1990

Diagnostic and prognostic utility of flow cytometric DNA measurements in follicular thyroid tumors

C. S. Grant; Ian D. Hay; John J. Ryan; Erik J. Bergstralh; Leslie M. Rainwater; John R. Goellner

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Ian D. Hay

University of Rochester

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Clive S. Grant

University of Pennsylvania

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Bryan McIver

University of Rochester

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C. S. Grant

University of Rochester

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