scholarly journals Evaluation of thyroid nodules classified as Bethesda category III on cytology and their malignancy rate: An institutional experience

CytoJournal ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 16 ◽  
pp. 18 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sayed Ali Almahari ◽  
Zainab Harb ◽  
Safa Alshaikh

Background: Thyroid gland nodules are common and fine-needle aspiration (FNA) is the gold standard for screening those nodules. The Bethesda system for reporting thyroid cytolopathology standardized reporting thyroid nodules aspirations, but atypia of undetermined significance or follicular lesion of undetermined significance (Bethesda category III) was the most controversial category. The aim of our study is to review our institutional experience and analyze the clinical implications of making a diagnosis of AUS/FLUS (Bethesda category III). Methods: This is a retrospective study of an 889 thyroid FNAs from 825 patients in Salmaniya Medical Complex, during (January 2013–December 2017). Results: The most common cause for designating cases as AUS/FLUS (Bethesda category III) was the presence of features suggestive of papillary thyroid carcinoma, but not quite fulfilling the criteria for such diagnosis. Ninety-six cases were diagnosed as AUS/FLUS (10.7%), in which 26 (27%) patients underwent surgery without repeating the FNA, 25 (26%) underwent a second FNA and 43 (44.7%) patients were followed up by ultrasound. On repeating the FNA, 1 (4%) was unsatisfactory, 13 (52%) were benign, 10 (40%) were AUS/FLUS, and only 1 (4%) was categorized as malignant. Thirty cases were surgically excised, in which 4 (13.3%) were diagnosed as follicular adenoma, 2 (6.6%) as Hurthle cell adenoma, 9 (30%) as multinodular goiter, 5 (16.6%) as multinodular goiter with Hashimoto thyroiditis, 1 (3.3%) as colloid nodule with Hashimoto thyroiditis, and 9 (30%) as papillary thyroid carcinoma. Among all the cases diagnosed initially as AUS/FLUS (Bethesda category III), 9 (9.3%) cases were diagnosed as papillary thyroid carcinoma. Conclusion: Diagnostically, we almost meet the international standards of designating cases with AUS/FLUS (Bethesda category III) and approximate the risk of malignancy. However, the clinical management's guidelines should be followed to decrease the risk of unnecessary surgeries and their complications. There is a statistically significant correlation between the age and gender with the final histopathology report, respectively.

2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alegyari Figueroa Cruz ◽  
Yineli Ortiz Torres ◽  
Victor J Carlo Chévere ◽  
Jose M Garcia-Mateo

Abstract Thyroid Nodules: Not So Simple to Manage Thyroid nodules diagnosis and malignancy risk stratification remains a challenge for decision making between conservative vs invasive management. The development of the clinical guidelines provides alternatives for evaluation and management for thyroid nodules, but can be used for all patients? A 43 y/o female without known past medical history is referred to the endocrine service by her primary care physician for evaluation of a thyroid nodule. She was presenting with 1 month history of mild discomfort on the neck and was evaluated with thyroid US that was relevant for multiple bilateral solid nodules measuring <1.0cm and a one spongiform measuring 1.7 x 1.2 x 1.3cm in the right lobe extending minimally to the capsule laterally and to the carotid artery wall. Patient denies cough, hoarseness, odynophagia, shortness of breath, family history of thyroid cancer or radiation exposure. On examination there were no goiter nor palpable thyroid nodules, as well as no clinical signs and symptoms of thyroid disease. Patient is clinically and biochemically euthyroid with a very low suspicion thyroid nodule (3% estimated malignancy risk). Despite nodule is below the 2.0cm cutoff point for fine needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) according to American Association of Clinical Endocrinologist (AACE) and American Thyroid Association (ATA) guidelines, it was done based on additional suspicious sonographic features detect by the endocrinologist on evaluation of ultrasound images. FNAB was performed and reveals Atypia of undetermined significance/Follicular Lesion of undetermined significance (AUS/FLUS) Bethesda system category III with a risk of malignancy of 5–15%. Patient was reluctant to surgery given the very low risk nodule and biopsy results of AUS/FLUS. In order to further manage this patient with undetermined significance thyroid nodule, Gene Expression Classifier (GEC) Molecular Analysis (AFIRMA) was performed. AFIRMA test was done with a second FNAB that also reveals AUS/FLUS but was found positive for BRAFv600, Bethesda system category IV: Suspicious of Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma. BRAFv600 is the only mutation that have high specificity (99%) for papillary thyroid carcinoma and is associated with increased disease-specific mortality, aggressive histologic phenotypes, lymph node metastases, extrathyroidal extension and risk of recurrence. Based on this data patient now have 95% risk of malignancy and requires surgical therapy. Patient preferred total thyroidectomy over lobectomy; pathology results shows 2.0cm Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma Stage I (T1N0M0). Despite very low risk nodule finding, malignancy was diagnosed. As depicted in this case, thyroid nodules aren’t so simple to manage, and their management should involve imaging and pathology findings along with clinical judgement and patient individualization in decision making process.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yaoting Sun ◽  
Lu Li ◽  
Weigang Ge ◽  
Zhen Dong ◽  
Wei Liu ◽  
...  

Thyroid nodules occur in about 60% of the population. Current diagnostic strategies, however, often fail at distinguishing malignant nodules before surgery, thus leading to unnecessary, invasive treatments. As proteins are involved in all physio/pathological processes, a proteome investigation of biopsied nodules may help correctly classify and identify malignant nodules and discover therapeutic targets. Quantitative mass spectrometry data-independent acquisition (DIA) enables highly reproducible and rapid throughput investigation of proteomes. An exhaustive spectral library of thyroid nodules is essential for DIA yet still unavailable. This study presents a comprehensive thyroid spectral library covering five types of thyroid tissue: multinodular goiter, follicular adenoma, follicular and papillary thyroid carcinoma, and normal thyroid tissue. Our library includes 925,330 transition groups, 157,548 peptide precursors, 121,960 peptides, 9941 protein groups, and 9826 proteins from proteotypic peptides. This library resource was evaluated using three papillary thyroid carcinoma samples and their corresponding adjacent normal thyroid tissue, leading to effective quantification of up to 7863 proteins from biopsy-level thyroid tissues.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Olav Inge Håskjold ◽  
Henrik Stenestø Foshaug ◽  
Therese Benedikte Iversen ◽  
Helga Charlotte Kjøren ◽  
Vegard Heimly Brun

Objective: The basis of thyroid nodule diagnostics is ultrasound guided fine needle biopsy with cytological evaluation (FNC), if US appearance is not clearly benign. The aim of this study was to investigate the predictive potential of dedicated, expert high resolution ultrasound, to see if histopathological entities of thyroid nodules can be diagnosed without invasive FNC biopsies. Design: Prospective case cohort study. Methods: 180 patients with 221 thyroid nodules were examined with ultrasound and prospectively assigned to the expected histopathological diagnosis: colloid nodule, adenomatoid colloid nodule, follicular adenoma, follicular carcinoma, follicular variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma, papillary thyroid carcinoma, or other thyroid cancer. In 101 of these, we later obtained histopathological reports for comparison. Results: Overall accuracy for classification into discrete histopathological categories by expert ultrasound was 71.3% and Cohen’s Kappa was 0.62. The sensitivity and specificity for detecting malignancy was 97.3% and 78.1%. The diagnostic accuracy for malignancy was 85.1%. ACR-TIRADS scores for the same nodules had a sensitivity of 97.3%, specificity of 26.6%, and accuracy of 52.5%. Conclusion: Dedicated expert high-resolution ultrasound without FNC can reliably distinguish benign versus malignant nodules, but also differentiate between several histopathological entities in thyroid nodules. There is potential for a reduction in the number of invasive FNC biopsies and diagnostic operations.


Author(s):  
Jibril Yahya Hudise ◽  
Khalid Ali Alshehri ◽  
Saad Nasser Alqarni ◽  
Yara Assiri ◽  
Ashwaq Asiri ◽  
...  

<p class="abstract"><strong>Background:</strong> <span lang="EN-IN">Thyroid nodules are common in the general population, especially in women. Non palpable nodules are often found when patients undergo diagnostic imaging such as ultrasonogra­phy and computed tomography of the chest and neck. This retrospective study to assess the Prevalence of thyroid malignancy in thyroid nodule related to gender, age, and pathology, in Aseer Central Hospital KSA. </span></p><p class="abstract"><strong>Methods:</strong> <span lang="EN-IN">During a 5-year period (2011–2016), the medical records of 319 patients with thyroid nodules were collected from the department of pathology at Aseer Central Hospital KSA. The cases were reviewed for data on gender, age, and the pathological result. All patients underwent hemi or total thyroidectomy. Comparisons between genders, age groups, and tissue origins were performed. All statistical tests were performed with SPSS software.  </span></p><p class="abstract"><strong>Results:</strong> <span lang="EN-IN">Over a period of 5 years, a total of 319 patients: male 17.2% and female 82.8% Underwent for hemi or total thyroidectomy. The age of presentation was ranging from 14 to 80 years. Among the 319 cases of thyroid nodules 73.7% were benign nodules and 26.3% malignant nodules. Papillary thyroid carcinoma in 72.6%, follicular thyroid carcinoma 10.6%, Hurthle cell carcinoma 4.8%, anaplastic carcinoma 4.8%, thyroid lymphoma 4.8% and medullary thyroid carcinoma in 2.4%. </span></p><p class="abstract"><strong>Conclusions:</strong> <span lang="EN-IN">Thyroid nodule is a common clinical problem and the proportion of such nodules that prove to be malignant is not small, investigations are of immense help to corroborate with the clinical and morphological finding. Papillary thyroid carcinoma most common malignant thyroid carcinoma followed by follicular thyroid carcinoma, hurthel cell carcinoma, anaplastic thyroid carcinoma, lymphoma and finally medullary thyroid Carcinoma. No significant different between male and female as risk factors for malignancy.</span></p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (5) ◽  
pp. e273-e278
Author(s):  
Ruey Hu ◽  
George Xu ◽  
Thomas Stricker ◽  
Bingshan Li ◽  
Vivian L. Weiss ◽  
...  

Objective: Here we present 2 cases of papillary thyroid microcarcinomas (PMCs) that had metastasized at presentation. The 2015 American Thyroid Association and the American College of Radiology Thyroid Imaging Reporting and Data System (TI-RADS) criteria do not recommend biopsy of the majority of subcentimeter thyroid nodules, as PMCs are mostly indolent with excellent prognosis. However, the paradigm of active surveillance presents a conundrum on how to identify the rare patient with distant metastatic disease while avoiding unnecessary intervention in the majority. Methods: After initial discovery of incidental lesions on chest computed tomography, core or wedge biopsies of the lung lesion were performed. Thyroid nodules on ultrasound were classified by TI-RADS. Tumor DNA was sequenced, annotated, filtered on 119 known cancer genes, and filtered for variants with an exome allele frequency of <0.001. Results: A 70-year-old woman and a 29-year-old woman presented with incidental pulmonary lesions on computed tomography scan. Lung biopsy revealed lung metastases from papillary thyroid carcinoma. The thyroid nodules in both patients were TI-RADS 3 and American Thyroid Association low-suspicion. Molecular testing showed a c.1721C>G mutation (p.Thr574Ser) in the TSHR gene in patient 1 and a codon 61 mutation in the NRAS gene in patient 2. Both patients were iodine-avid, with complete structural remission in one patient and ongoing treatment with evidence of structural response in the other. Conclusion: The 2 presentations demonstrate unexpected and concerning behavior of PMCs. Both thyroid tumors were subcentimeter in diameter, meaning they would have escaped detection using traditional risk-stratification algorithms in active surveillance. Further knowledge of tumor genetics and microenvironment may assist in predicting tumor behavior in PMCs.


Medicine ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 94 (44) ◽  
pp. e1881 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ye-Feng Cai ◽  
Qing-Xuan Wang ◽  
Chun-Jue Ni ◽  
Gui-Long Guo ◽  
Quan Li ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Rogério Aparecido Dedivitis ◽  
Leandro Luongo de Matos ◽  
Felipe Guilherme Silva Souza ◽  
Jose Luis Bogado Ortiz

Abstract Introduction Hashimoto thyroiditis (HT) shares many characteristics with papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC), and some studies show that, when associated, PTC is diagnosed mostly with smaller lesions and multifocal pattern. Objective To evaluate the relationship between HT and PTC. Methods A retrospective study of 155 patients who underwent total thyroidectomy from 2009 to 2015. Demographical, clinical and ultrasonographical data, as well as anatomopathological findings were evaluated. Results There were signs of thyroidits in 35 patients, and 114 patients had a unifocal disease. There was no statistical significance between the variables studied and thyroiditis. However, when compared with the occurrence of unifocal or multifocal lesions, there was statistical significance regarding age (p = 0.038) and mass (p = 0.031). There was no direct relationship between thyroiditis and multifocality (p = 0.325) nor between thyroiditis and cervical extension of the disease (p = 0.300 e p = 0.434). Conclusion There was no relationship between thyroiditis and multifocality in cases of PTC.


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