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Diagnostic Performance of Core Needle Biopsy for Characterizing Thyroidectomy Bed Lesions

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Alternative Title
Diagnostic Performance of Core Needle Biopsy for Characterizing Thyroidectomy Bed Lesions
Abstract
Objective: Thyroidectomy bed lesions frequently show suspicious ultrasound (US) features after thyroid surgery. Fine-needle aspiration (FNA) may not provide definitive pathological information about the lesions. Although core-needle biopsy (CNB) has excellent diagnostic performance in characterizing suspicious thyroid nodules, no published studies have evaluated the performance of CNB specifically for thyroidectomy bed lesions. Therefore, we aimed to evaluate the diagnostic performance and safety of CNB for characterizing thyroidectomy bed lesions.

Materials and methods: A total of 124 thyroidectomy bed lesions in 113 patients (79 female and 34 male; age, 23-85 years) who underwent US-guided CNB between December 2008 and December 2020 were included. We reviewed the US imaging features of the target lesions and the histories of previous biopsies. The pathologic results, diagnostic performance for malignancy, and complications of CNB were analyzed.

Results: All samples (100%) obtained by CNB were adequate for pathological analysis. Pathological analysis revealed inconclusive results in two lesions (1.6%). According to the reference standard, 50 lesions were ultimately malignant (40.3%), and 72 were benign (58.1%), excluding the two inconclusive lesions. The performance of CNB for diagnosing malignant thyroidectomy bed lesions in the 122 lesions had a sensitivity of 98.0% (49/50), a specificity of 100% (72/72), positive predictive value of 100% (49/49), and negative predictive value of 98.6% (72/73). Eleven lesions were referred for CNB after prior inconclusive FNA results in thyroidectomy bed lesions, for all of which CNB yielded correct conclusive pathologic diagnoses. According to the pathological analysis of CNB, there were various benign lesions (58.9%, 73/124) besides recurrence, including benign postoperative lesions other than suture granuloma (32.3%, 40/124), suture granuloma (15.3%, 19/124), remnant thyroid tissue (5.6%, 7/124), parathyroid lesions (4%, 5/124), and abscesses (1.6%, 2/124). No major or minor complications were associated with the CNB procedure.

Conclusion: US-guided CNB is accurate and safe for characterizing thyroidectomy bed lesions.
Author(s)
So Yeong JeongJung Hwan BaekSae Rom ChungYoung Jun ChoiDong Eun SongKi-Wook ChungWon Woong KimJeong Hyun Lee
Issued Date
2022
Type
Article
Keyword
Core-needle biopsyFine-needle aspirationThyroidThyroid cancerThyroidectomyUltrasonography
DOI
10.3348/kjr.2021.0772
URI
https://oak.ulsan.ac.kr/handle/2021.oak/14404
Publisher
KOREAN JOURNAL OF RADIOLOGY
Language
영어
ISSN
1229-6929
Citation Volume
23
Citation Number
10
Citation Start Page
1019
Citation End Page
1027
Appears in Collections:
Medicine > Nursing
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