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The American Thyroid Association risk classification of papillary thyroid cancer according to presurgery cytology.
- Source :
-
European Journal of Endocrinology . Feb2024, Vol. 190 Issue 2, p165-172. 8p. - Publication Year :
- 2024
-
Abstract
- Objective To compare the American Thyroid Association (ATA) risk staging of histologically proven papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) in patients who received a presurgery cytologic result of either indeterminate thyroid nodules (ITNs, Bethesda III/IV) or suspicious for malignancy/malignant (TIR 4/5, Bethesda V/VI). Methods Clinical, ultrasonographic, cytological data from patients with histologically diagnosed PTC were retrospectively collected. Results Patients were stratified according to the preoperative fine-needle aspiration cytology into 2 groups: 51 ITNs (TIR3A/3B) and 118 suspicious/malignant (TIR 4/5). Male/female ratio, age, and presurgery TSH level were similar between the 2 groups. At ultrasound, TIR 4/5 nodules were significantly more frequently hypoechoic (P =.037), with irregular margins (P =.041), and with microcalcifications (P =.020) and were more frequently classified as high-risk according to the European Thyroid Imaging and Reporting Data System (EU-TIRADS; P =.021). At histology, the follicular PTC subtype was significantly more prevalent among ITNs while classical PTC subtype was more frequent in TIR 4/5 group (P =.002). In TIR 4/5 group, a higher rate of focal vascular invasion (P <.001) and neck lymph node metastasis (P =.028) was observed. Intermediate-risk category according to ATA was significantly more frequent in TIR 4/5 group while low-risk category was more frequently found among ITNs (P =.021), with a higher number of patients receiving radioiodine in TIR 4/5 group (P =.002). At multivariate logistic regression, having a TIR 4/5 cytology was associated with a significant risk of having a higher ATA risk classification as compared to ITN (OR 4.6 [95% CI 1.523-14.007], P =.007), independently from presurgery findings (nodule size at ultrasound, sex, age, and EU-TIRADS score). Conclusions Papillary thyroid cancers recorded among ITNs are likely less aggressive and are generally assessed as at lower risk according to ATA classification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Subjects :
- *THYROID cancer
*THYROID nodules
*CYTOLOGY
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 08044643
- Volume :
- 190
- Issue :
- 2
- Database :
- Academic Search Index
- Journal :
- European Journal of Endocrinology
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 176004736
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1093/ejendo/lvae012