| Literature DB >> 28638103 |
Chi-Maw Lin1, Cheng-Ping Wang2, Chun-Nan Chen2, Che-Yi Lin1,2, Ting-Yi Li1, Chen-Han Chou1, Ya-Ching Hsu3, Po-Yen Kuo4, Tsung-Lin Yang2, Pei-Jen Lou2, Jenq-Yuh Ko2, Tseng-Cheng Chen5.
Abstract
Early detection of neck lymph node (LN) recurrence is paramount in improving the prognosis of treated head and neck cancer patients. Ultrasound (US) with US-guided fine needle aspiration (FNA) and core needle biopsy (CNB) have been shown to have great accuracy for LN diagnoses in the untreated neck. However, in the treated neck with fibrosis, their roles are not clarified. Here, we retrospectively review 153 treated head and neck cancer patients who had received US and US-guided FNA/CNB. In multivariate logistic regression analyses, size (short-axis diameter >0.8 cm) (odds ratio (OR) 4.19, P = 0.007), round shape (short/long axis ratio >0.5) (OR 3.44, P = 0.03), heterogeneous internal echo (OR 3.92, P = 0.009) and irregular margin (OR 7.32, P < 0.001) are effective US features in predicting recurrent LNs in the treated neck. However, hypoechogenicity (OR 2.38, P = 0.289) and chaotic/absent vascular pattern (OR 3.04, P = 0.33) are ineffective. US-guided FNA (sensitivity/specificity: 95.24%/97.92%) is effective in the treated neck, though with high non-diagnostic rate (29.69%). US-guided CNB (sensitivity/specificity: 84.62%/100%) is also effective, though with low negative predictive value (62.5%). Overall, US with US-guided FNA/CNB are still effective diagnostic tools for neck nodal recurrence surveillance.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28638103 PMCID: PMC5479791 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-04039-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
The clinical characteristics of the head and neck cancer patients in whom the treated necks were followed by US.
| Non-recurrent group (n = 85) | Recurrent group (n = 68) | P value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 52.60 ± 10.93 | 52.49 ± 8.39 | 0.94 |
| Gender | |||
| Male | 72/85 (84.71%) | 62/68 (91.18%) | 0.32 |
| Female | 13/85 (15.29%) | 6/68 (8.82%) | |
| Primary tumor location | |||
| Oral cavity | 36/85 (42.35%) | 30/68 (44.12%) | 0.22 |
| Nasopharynx | 24/85 (28.24%) | 15/68 (22.06%) | |
| Oropharynx/Hypopharynx/Larynx | 19/85 (22.35%) | 22/68 (32.35%) | |
| Others | 6/85 (7.06%) | 1/68 (1.47%) | |
| Primary T classification | |||
| T1, T2 | 60/85 (70.59%) | 47/68 (69.12%) | 0.86 |
| T3, T4 | 25/85 (29.41%) | 21/68 (30.88%) | |
| Neck N classification | |||
| N0 | 45/85 (52.9%) | 16/68 (23.5%) | <0.001* |
| N + (N1,2,3) | 40/85 (47.1%) | 52/68 (76.5%) | |
| Previous neck treatment history | |||
| Radiation alone | 39/85 (45.88%) | 28/68 (41.18%) | 0.02 |
| Neck dissection alone | 33/85 (38.82%) | 17/68 (25%) | |
| Radiation+Neck dissection | 13/85 (15.29%) | 23/68 (33.82%) | |
Abbreviation: US, ultrasound; *using Fisher’s exact test.
The US characteristics of the head and neck cancer patients in whom the treated necks were followed by US.
| Non-recurrent group (n = 85) | Recurrent group (n = 68) | P value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| US duration after previous Tx (months) | 17.35 ± 19.44 | 17.38 ± 22.08 | 0.99 |
| Targeted neck LN level | |||
| Upper neck (Level I, II) | 57/85 (67.06%) | 43/68 (63.24%) | 0.73 |
| Lower neck (Level III,IV,V) | 28/85 (32.94%) | 25/68 (36.76%) | |
| Targeted neck LN size, Long axis (cm) | 1.40 ± 0.71 | 2.29 ± 1.18 | <0.001 |
| Targeted neck LN size, Short axis (cm) | 0.73 ± 0.42 | 1.44 ± 0.94 | <0.001 |
| US-guided tissue sampling method | |||
| FNA | 75/85 (88.24%) | 29/68 (42.65%) | <0.001 |
| CNB | 5/85 (5.88%) | 20/68 (29.41%) | |
| FNA + CNB | 5/85 (5.88%) | 19/68 (27.94%) | |
| Suspicious US feature | |||
| Size >0.8 cm (short axis diameter) | 21/85 (24.71%) | 54/68 (79.41%) | <0.001 |
| Round shape, (S/L axis ratio >0.5) | 35/85 (41.18%) | 55/68 (80.88%) | <0.001 |
| Hypoechogenicity | 70/85 (82.35%) | 64/68 (94.12%) | 0.046* |
| Heterogeneous | 18/85 (21.18%) | 55/68 (80.88%) | <0.001 |
| Irregular margin | 16/85 (18.82%) | 52/68 (76.47%) | <0.001 |
| Different vascular pattern | <0.001 | ||
| Chaotic pattern | 1/85 (1.18%) | 4/68 (5.88%) | |
| Linear hilum pattern | 24/85 (28.24%) | 1/68 (1.47%) | |
| Absent | 60/85 (70.59%) | 63/68 (92.64%) | |
Abbreviation: US, ultrasound; LN, lymph node; Tx, treatment; FNA, fine needle aspiration; CNB, core needle biopsy; S/L axis ratio, short to long axis ratio; *using Fisher’s exact test.
Comparison of different US features and tissue sampling methods.
| PPV | NPV | Sensitivity | Specificity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Suspected US features | ||||
| Hypoechogenicity | 47.76% | 78.95% | 94.12% | 17.65% |
| Size >0.8 cm, short axis | 72.0% | 82.05% | 79.41% | 75.29% |
| Heterogeneous | 75.34% | 83.75% | 80.88% | 78.82% |
| Irregular margin | 76.47% | 81.18% | 76.47% | 81.18% |
| Chaotic or absent vascularity | 52.34% | 96.0% | 98.53% | 28.23% |
| Round shape (S/L axis ratio >0.5) | 61.11% | 79.37% | 80.88% | 58.82% |
| ≥2 suspected US features (except hypoechogenicity and vascularity) | 72.73% | 93.85% | 94.12% | 71.76% |
| US-guided tissue sampling methods | ||||
| FNA | 97.56% | 95.92% | 95.24% | 97.92% |
| CNB | 100% | 62.5% | 84.62% | 100% |
| FNA + CNB | 98.44% | 94.92% | 95.45% | 98.25% |
Abbreviation: US, ultrasound; FNA, fine needle aspiration; CNB, core needle biopsy; PPV, positive predictive values; NPV, negative predictive values; S/L axis ratio, short/long axis ratio.
Multivariate Logistic Regression Analyses of US features to predict the neck LN recurrence in treated head and neck cancer patients.
| US features | OR | 95% CI | P value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Size, LN short axis >0.8 cm | 4.19 | 1.47~11.95 | 0.007 |
| Round Shape (S/L axis ratio >0.5) | 3.44 | 1.12~10.54 | 0.030 |
| Heterogeneous | 3.92 | 1.40~10.97 | 0.009 |
| Chaotic or absent vascular pattern | 3.04 | 0.33~28.42 | 0.330 |
| Irregular margin | 7.32 | 2.55~21.02 | <0.001 |
| Hypoechogenicity internal echo | 2.38 | 0.48~11.83 | 0.289 |
Abbreviation: US, ultrasound; LN, lymph node; S/L axis ratio, short/long axis ratio.
Figure 1All significant ultrasound features of malignant lymph nodes (LNs) in the treated neck of head and neck cancer patients: (a) Left level IV recurrent LN with irregular margin (interrupted margin) (arrow), malignant (b) Left level IIa recurrent LN with round shape (short/long axis ratio >0.5), malignant (c) Right level Ib recurrent LN with size >0.8 cm, short axis, malignant (d) Right level Ib recurrent LN with heterogeneous internal echo, malignant.
Figure 2In comparison to the untreated neck, there are two ultrasound features of lymph nodes (hypoechogenicity and avascular pattern) that are more frequently noted in the treated neck: (a) Left level III benign LN in the untreated neck, isoechogenicity (equal to left sternocleidomastoid muscle (star) without fibrotic change) (b) Right level IV non-recurrent LN in the treated neck, hypoechogenicity (lower than right sternocleidomastoid muscle (star) with fibrotic change after previous neck dissection) (c) Left level Va recurrent LN in the treated neck, hypoechogenicity (lower than left sternocleidomastoid muscle (star) with fibrotic change after radiation) (d) Left level IIa benign LN in the untreated neck with typical linear hilum using a Doppler scan (e) Right level III non-recurrent LN in the treated neck, avascular pattern using a Doppler scan (f) Left level III recurrent LN in the treated neck, avascular pattern using a Doppler scan.
Figure 3Pathologic pictures of fibrotic tissues in US-guided CNB samples in treated necks: (a) Left level IIa non-recurrent LN in the treated neck (benign fibro-adipose tissue with increased collagen deposition, hematoxylin and eosin stain, 200x) (b) Right level IV recurrent LN in the treated neck (malignant spindle cells in the fibrotic stroma, hematoxylin and eosin stain, 200x).