| Literature DB >> 26081825 |
Chan Kwon Jung1, Hye Sook Min2, Hyo Jin Park3, Dong Eun Song4, Jang Hee Kim5, So Yeon Park3, Hyunju Yoo6, Mi Kyung Shin7.
Abstract
In recent years throughout Korea, the use of ultrasound-guided core needle biopsy (CNB) has become common for the preoperative diagnosis of thyroid nodules. However, there is no consensus on the pathology reporting system for thyroid CNB. The Korean Endocrine Pathology Thyroid Core Needle Biopsy Study Group held a conference on thyroid CNB pathology and developed guidelines through contributions from the participants. This article discusses the outcome of the discussions that led to a consensus on the pathology reporting of thyroid CNB.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnosis; Guideline; Image-guided biopsy; Preoperative period; Thyroid nodule
Year: 2015 PMID: 26081825 PMCID: PMC4508566 DOI: 10.4132/jptm.2015.06.04
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pathol Transl Med ISSN: 2383-7837
Fig. 1.Core needle biopsies of fibrotic nodules. The right column images represent the high-power views of the lesional area in the left column images. (A) The specimen consists of an acellular fibrotic lesion and adjacent normal parenchyma. (B) The fibrotic area contains no follicular cells, but contains a few lymphocytes and stromal cells. This lesion is classified in the nondiagnostic category. (C) The specimen shows a paucicellular structure with marked fibrosis and calcification. (D) Scattered atypical cells with suspicious morphological features of papillary carcinoma are embedded in the fibrosis. This lesion contains suspicious follicular cells and should therefore be diagnosed as suspicious for malignancy or as a malignancy, depending on the degree of nuclear atypia. (E) The specimen shows marked fibrosis and calcification. (F) The high-power view of the lesion shows relatively numerous benign-appearing follicular cells. This lesion can be diagnosed as a benign follicular nodule.
Diagnostic categories of thyroid core needle biopsy
| I. Nondiagnostic or unsatisfactory |
| • Normal thyroid tissue only |
| • Extrathyroid tissue only (e.g., skeletal muscle, mature adipose tissue) |
| • A virtually acellular specimen |
| • Acellular/paucicellular fibrotic nodule |
| • Blood clot only |
| • Other |
| II. Benign lesion |
| • Benign follicular nodule or consistent with a benign follicular nodule |
| • Hashimoto's thyroiditis |
| • Granulomatous (subacute) thyroiditis |
| • Nonthyroidal lesion (e.g., parathyroid lesions, benign neurogenic tumors, benign lymph node) |
| • Other |
| III. Indeterminate lesion |
| IIIA. Indeterminate follicular lesion with nuclear atypia |
| • Follicular proliferative lesions with focal nuclear atypia |
| • Follicular proliferative lesions with equivocal or questionable nuclear atypia |
| • Atypical follicular cells embedded in a fibrotic stroma |
| IIIB. Indeterminate follicular lesion with architectural atypia |
| • Microfollicular proliferative lesion lacking a fibrous capsule or the adjacent nonlesional tissue in the specimen |
| • Solid or trabecular follicular lesion lacking a fibrous capsule or the adjacent nonlesional tissue in the specimen |
| • Macrofollicular proliferative lesion with a fibrous capsule |
| • Hürthle cell proliferative lesion lacking a fibrous capsule or the adjacent nonlesional tissue in the specimen |
| IIIC. Other indeterminate lesions |
| IV. Follicular neoplasm or suspicious for a follicular neoplasm |
| • Microfollicular proliferative lesion with a fibrous capsule |
| • Mixed microfollicular and normofollicular proliferative lesion with a fibrous capsule |
| • Solid/trabecular follicular proliferative lesion with a fibrous capsule |
| • Hürthle cell proliferative lesion with a fibrous capsule |
| • Follicular neoplasm with focal nuclear atypia |
| V. Suspicious for malignancy |
| • Suspicious for papillary carcinoma, medullary carcinoma, poorly differentiated carcinoma, metastatic carcinoma, lymphoma, etc. |
| VI. Malignant |
| • Papillary thyroid carcinoma, poorly differentiated carcinoma, undifferentiated (anaplastic carcinoma), medullary thyroid carcinoma, lymphoma, metastatic carcinoma, etc. |
| Comments |
| 1. The core needle biopsy provides an accurate diagnosis in most cases; however, it may miss some cancers or sometimes may be inconclusive. |
| 2. Definitive therapeutic surgery (i.e., a total thyroidectomy) should not be undertaken as a result of a category III, IV, or V core needle biopsy diagnosis. |
| 3. The management of a thyroid lesion must be based on a multidisciplinary approach. |
Fig. 2.(A, B) The ultrasound images show well-circumscribed solid, homogeneous, nodules with peripheral hypoechoic rims. (C, D) The core needle biopsies show only microfollicular proliferation. These specimens do not contain a fibrous capsule or adjacent normal tissue that is required to make a diagnosis of follicular neoplasm. (E, F) Images are the high-power views of Fig. 2C and D, respectively. No nuclear atypia is present. The left and right columns show the conventional and Hürthle cell types, respectively. Typical ultrasound features of follicular neoplasms, when present, can lead to the diagnosis of follicular neoplasms, even when specimens are not contained in a fibrous capsule.
Fig. 3.Core needle biopsy findings of a follicular neoplasm with a macrofollicular growth pattern. The images in the left column and the right column show the core needle biopsy specimen and the resected specimen, respectively. (A) The ultrasound image shows a well-circumscribed, isoechoic, ovoid nodule with a peripheral hypoechoic rim. A focal cystic change is present. (B) The surgical specimen exhibits a thick fibrotic capsule surrounding the nodule. (C) The core needle biopsy shows a macrofollicular proliferative lesion with a fibrous capsule (arrows). (E) The high-power view of the biopsy specimen shows benign-appearing follicular cells. The typical ultrasound features and thick fibrous capsule can lead to a diagnosis of follicular neoplasm, even in a macrofollicular lesion. The microscopic examination of the surgical specimen shows that the tumor is well encapsulated (D) and capsular invasion is minimal (F).
Fig. 4.(A) The core needle biopsy shows a microfollicular proliferative lesion and surrounding normal tissue. (B) The high-power view of the boxed area in Fig. 4A shows that the lesion has no nuclear atypia or fibrous capsule. This lesion should be diagnosed as a benign follicular nodule. (C, D) When microfollicular proliferative lesions show a definite fibrous capsule (arrows) in the core needle biopsy, the specimens should be diagnosed as a follicular neoplasm.
Fig. 5.The core needle biopsy of a follicular neoplasm with focal nuclear atypia. The images in the left and right columns show the findings of the core needle biopsy and the corresponding surgical specimen, respectively. (A) The ultrasound image shows a solid, homogeneous, hypoechoic, ovoid nodule with a peripheral halo. (B) The cut surface of the resected specimen corresponds to the ultrasound image in Fig. 5A. (C, D) The low-power view shows a follicular proliferative lesion with a fibrous capsule. (E) The high-power view of Fig. 5C reveals focal nuclear atypia. (F) The corresponding image in the surgical specimen more definitely shows the morphological features (e.g., nuclear enlargement, irregularity, clearing, and grooves) of a follicular variant of papillary carcinoma.
Fig. 6.The core needle biopsy shows a follicular proliferative lesion with nuclear atypia and diffuse strong immunohistochemical staining for galectin 3 and cytokeratin 19 in the tumor cells. Images in the left and right columns show the low magnification and high magnification views, respectively, of the samples.
Fig. 7.Core needle biopsies of malignant thyroid nodules. (A, B) The biopsy specimen maintains the typical morphological features of papillary carcinoma. Poorly differentiated carcinoma shows solid, trabecular, and insular growth patterns (C) and mitosis (arrow) (D) under the high-power view. The medullary carcinoma shows the typical morphological features under the low-power view (E) and the high-power view (F).
Fig. 8.Diagnostic pitfalls in thyroid core needle biopsy. Follicular cells are smaller and darker in core needle biopsies in comparison (A) to resected specimens (B). These images have been obtained from the same patient as those pictured in Fig. 6. (C) The core needle biopsy shows the histologic features of a benign follicular nodule. (D) The high-power view of the boxed area in Fig. 8C shows nuclear vacuoles that mimic intranuclear cytoplasmic pseudoinclusions in papillary carcinoma (arrows).