| Literature DB >> 32397148 |
Roh-Eul Yoo1,2, Ji-Hoon Kim1,2, Inpyeong Hwang1,2, Koung Mi Kang1,2, Tae Jin Yun1,2, Seung Hong Choi1,2, Chul-Ho Sohn1,2, Sun-Won Park2,3.
Abstract
Diagnostic accuracy of US in the evaluation of lymph node (LN) metastasis for thyroid cancer patients is limited. We investigated the value of CT added to US for characterizing LNs in preoperative thyroid cancer patients by node-by-node correlation. A total of 225 primary thyroid cancer patients who underwent LN biopsy were included. Based on node-by-node correlation, 274 LNs were classified into probably benign, indeterminate, and suspicious categories on US, CT, and combined US/CT. Malignancy risks were calculated for each category and were compared between US/CT concordant and discordant cases. On US, CT, and combined US/CT, malignancy risks were 1.7%, 8.7%, and 0% in the probably benign category, 22.4%, 5.9%, and 8.0% in the indeterminate category, and 77.2%, 82.0%, and 75.6% in the suspicious category, respectively. Malignancy risk of the concordant suspicious category was higher than that of the discordant suspicious category (84.7% vs. 43.2%, p < 0.001). The addition of CT helped correctly detect additional metastasis in 16.4% of the US indeterminate LNs and in 1.7% of the US probably benign LNs. CT may complement US for LN characterization in thyroid cancer patients by suggesting the diagnostic confidence level for the suspicious category and helping correctly detect metastasis in US indeterminate LNs.Entities:
Keywords: CT; lymph node metastasis; node-by-node correlation; thyroid cancer; ultrasonography
Year: 2020 PMID: 32397148 PMCID: PMC7281101 DOI: 10.3390/cancers12051190
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Incidences of the US, CT, and combined US/CT categories.
| Category | US | CT | Combined US/CT |
|---|---|---|---|
| Probably benign | 21.2 (58/274) | 8.4 (23/274) | 20.4 (56/274) |
| Indeterminate | 24.5 (67/274) | 36.9 (101/274) | 18.2 (50/274) |
| Suspicious | 54.4 (149/274) | 54.7 (150/274) | 61.3 (168/274) |
Data are percentages (raw data). CT—computed tomography, US—ultrasonography.
Malignancy risks of the US, CT, and combined US/CT categories.
| Category | US | CT | Combined US/CT |
|---|---|---|---|
| Probably benign | 1.7 (1/58) | 8.7 (2/23) | 0 (0/56) |
| Indeterminate | 22.4 (15/67) | 5.9 (6/101) | 8.0 (4/50) |
| Suspicious | 77.2 (115/149) | 82.0 (123/150) | 75.6 (127/168) |
Data are percentages (raw data). CT—computed tomography, US—ultrasonography.
Malignancy risks of the combined US/CT categories according to the US and CT categories. Unless otherwise indicated, data in parentheses are the number of LNs.
| US | CT | Combined US/CT | Malignancy Risk % * |
|---|---|---|---|
| Probably benign (16) | Probably benign (16) | 0 (0/16) | |
| Probably benign (58) | Indeterminate (38) | Probably benign (38) | 0 (0/38) |
| Suspicious (4) | Suspicious (4) | 25.0 (1/4) | |
| Probably benign (2) | Probably benign (2) | 0 (0/2) | |
| Indeterminate (67) | Indeterminate (50) | Indeterminate (50) | 8.0 (4/50) |
| Suspicious (15) | Suspicious (15) | 73.3 (11/15) | |
| Probably benign (5) | Suspicious (5) | 40.0 (2/5) | |
| Suspicious (149) | Indeterminate (13) | Suspicious (13) | 15.4 (2/13) |
| Suspicious (131) | Suspicious (131) | 84.7 (111/131) |
* Data in the parentheses are raw data. CT—computed tomography, US—ultrasonography.
Figure 1Changes in the LN classification with the addition of CT. CT—computed tomography, LN—lymph node, US—ultrasonography.
Figure 2Representative case of correct reclassification of a US indeterminate LN with the addition of CT in a 48-year-old woman with PTC. (a) On US, an ovoid LN (arrow) with neither echogenic hilum nor suspicious feature was noted at the left neck level IV. The LN was classified as an indeterminate LN on US. (b) The LN, however, was shown to have a focal strong contrast enhancement (arrow) on CT, which led to correct reclassification of the LN as a suspicious LN. The final diagnosis based on FNA turned out to be metastasis. Correct changes in the classification were made in 5.1% (14 of 274) of the LNs enrolled, and the addition of CT helped identify additional metastasis in 6.2% (14 of 225) of the patients enrolled.
Concordance between the US and CT categories.
| US/CT Category * | No. of LNs (%) | Malignancy Risk % † |
|---|---|---|
| Concordant benign | 16 (5.8) | 0 (0/16) |
| Discordant benign | 40 (14.6) | 0 (0/40) |
| Concordant indeterminate | 50 (18.2) | 8.0 (4/50) |
| Concordant suspicious | 131 (47.8) | 84.7 (111/131) |
| Discordant suspicious | 37 (13.5) | 43.2 (16/37) |
* The word ‘concordant’ was used when categories were the same between US and CT. ‘Discordant suspicious’ refers to cases classified as the suspicious category on either CT or US and as the benign or indeterminate category on the other imaging modality. ‘Discordant benign’ refers to cases classified as the benign category on either CT or US and as the indeterminate category on the other imaging modality. † Data in the parentheses are raw data. CT—computed tomography, US—ultrasonography.
Figure 3Representative case of a concordant suspicious LN with the final diagnosis of metastasis in a 41-year-old woman with PTC. (a) The gray scale US image depicts a round LN (arrow) with microcalcifications at the right neck level IV. The LN was classified as a suspicious LN on US. (b) The LN (arrow) showed diffuse strong enhancement on CT and thus was also classified as a suspicious LN on CT.
Figure 4Representative case of a discordant suspicious LN with the final diagnosis of a benign LN in a 61-year-old woman with PTC. (a) On US, an ovoid LN (arrow) at the right neck level II had neither echogenic hilum nor suspicious feature and therefore was classified as an indeterminate LN. (b) On CT, LN (arrows) was interpreted to have a heterogeneous enhancement and was classified as a suspicious LN.
Figure 5Discordant benign case with the final diagnosis of a benign LN in a 67-year-old woman with PTC. (a) On US, an ovoid LN (arrow) with echogenic hilum was found at the right neck level IV. The LN was classified as probably benign LN on US. (b) On CT, the LN (arrow) was classified as an indeterminate LN because it showed neither central hilar fat nor central hilar vessel enhancement in the absence of any suspicious feature.
Figure 6Flowchart of study sample. CNB—core-needle biopsy, FNA—fine-needle aspiration, LN—lymph node.