OBJECTIVE: To determine the role of repeated fine-needle aspiration (FNA) biopsy in the evaluation of thyroid nodules initially classified as benign. METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed data on 235 patients with clinically palpable thyroid nodules who underwent a repeated FNA biopsy after an initially benign diagnosis. All the nodules were evaluated and biopsies were obtained by the same endocrinologist. Cytodiagnoses were divided into four major categories: inadequate, benign, suspicious, or malignant. RESULTS: The study cohort consisted of 211 female and 24 male patients with a mean age of 47.1 years. The repeated FNA cytodiagnoses were as follows: 204 (86.8%) remained benign and 19 (8.1%), 11 (4.7%), and 1 (0.4%) became inadequate, suspicious, and malignant, respectively. All patients with benign or inadequate cytologic results on repeated FNA who underwent thyroid surgical resection had benign histologic findings (N = 23). The mean follow-up period between the initial and the last benign FNA cytodiagnosis in the 186 patients without surgical intervention was 1,078 days (2.95 years). Nine of 11 patients with suspicious cytologic results underwent a thyroid surgical procedure, which revealed a benign lesion in 7 and malignant disease in 2 (18%). The other two patients with suspicious cytologic findings had a 13-year clinical follow-up without any clinical evidence of a thyroid malignant lesion. The only patient with malignant cytologic findings on repeated FNA (a 76-year-old woman) refused surgical treatment and was lost to follow-up. CONCLUSION: Although the yield of finding a malignant lesion on repeated FNA biopsy in the follow-up of a presumably benign thyroid nodule may be low, rebiopsy reduces the rate of false-negative diagnosis from an average of 5.2% to <1.3%.
OBJECTIVE: To determine the role of repeated fine-needle aspiration (FNA) biopsy in the evaluation of thyroid nodules initially classified as benign. METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed data on 235 patients with clinically palpable thyroid nodules who underwent a repeated FNA biopsy after an initially benign diagnosis. All the nodules were evaluated and biopsies were obtained by the same endocrinologist. Cytodiagnoses were divided into four major categories: inadequate, benign, suspicious, or malignant. RESULTS: The study cohort consisted of 211 female and 24 male patients with a mean age of 47.1 years. The repeated FNA cytodiagnoses were as follows: 204 (86.8%) remained benign and 19 (8.1%), 11 (4.7%), and 1 (0.4%) became inadequate, suspicious, and malignant, respectively. All patients with benign or inadequate cytologic results on repeated FNA who underwent thyroid surgical resection had benign histologic findings (N = 23). The mean follow-up period between the initial and the last benign FNA cytodiagnosis in the 186 patients without surgical intervention was 1,078 days (2.95 years). Nine of 11 patients with suspicious cytologic results underwent a thyroid surgical procedure, which revealed a benign lesion in 7 and malignant disease in 2 (18%). The other two patients with suspicious cytologic findings had a 13-year clinical follow-up without any clinical evidence of a thyroid malignant lesion. The only patient with malignant cytologic findings on repeated FNA (a 76-year-old woman) refused surgical treatment and was lost to follow-up. CONCLUSION: Although the yield of finding a malignant lesion on repeated FNA biopsy in the follow-up of a presumably benign thyroid nodule may be low, rebiopsy reduces the rate of false-negative diagnosis from an average of 5.2% to <1.3%.
Authors: Frederico F R Maia; Patrícia S Matos; Elizabeth J Pavin; José Vassallo; Denise E Zantut-Wittmann Journal: Endocrine Date: 2011-04-16 Impact factor: 3.633
Authors: Bryan R Haugen; Erik K Alexander; Keith C Bible; Gerard M Doherty; Susan J Mandel; Yuri E Nikiforov; Furio Pacini; Gregory W Randolph; Anna M Sawka; Martin Schlumberger; Kathryn G Schuff; Steven I Sherman; Julie Ann Sosa; David L Steward; R Michael Tuttle; Leonard Wartofsky Journal: Thyroid Date: 2016-01 Impact factor: 6.568
Authors: Christine E Cherella; Henry A Feldman; Monica Hollowell; Danielle M Richman; Edmund S Cibas; Jessica R Smith; Trevor E Angell; Zhihong Wang; Erik K Alexander; Ari J Wassner Journal: J Clin Endocrinol Metab Date: 2018-09-01 Impact factor: 5.958