scholarly journals Ultrasound Assessment of Autonomous Thyroid Nodules before and after Radioiodine Therapy Using Thyroid Imaging Reporting and Data System (TIRADS)

Diagnostics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 1038
Author(s):  
Simone Agnes Schenke ◽  
Jan Wuestemann ◽  
Michael Zimny ◽  
Michael Christoph Kreissl

The Thyroid Imaging and Reporting System (TIRADS) allows a sonographic assessment of the malignancy risk of thyroid nodules (TNs). To date, there is a lack of systematic data about the change in ultrasound (US) features after therapeutic interventions. The aim of this study was to characterize the changes in autonomously functioning thyroid nodules (AFTNs) after radioiodine therapy (RIT) by using TIRADS. We retrospectively assessed data from 68 patients with AFTNs treated with RIT between 2016 and 2018 who had available first and second follow-up US imaging. Before RIT, 69.1% of the AFTNs were classified as low-risk TNs when applying Kwak TIRADS (EU-TIRADS 52.9%), 22.1% were intermediate-risk TNs (EU-TIRADS 19.1%), and 8.8% were high-risk TNs (EU-TIRADS 27.9%). Twelve months after RIT, 22.1% of the AFTNs showed features of high-risk TNs according to Kwak TIRADS (EU-TIRADS 45.6%). The proportion of intermediate TNs also increased to 36.8% (EU-TIRADS 29.4%), and 41.2% were low-risk TNs (EU-TIRADS 25%). A significant percentage of AFTNs presented with features suspicious for malignancy according to TIRADS before RIT, and this number increased significantly after therapy. Therefore, before thyroid US, thorough anamnesis regarding prior radioiodine treatment is necessary to prevent unneeded diagnostic procedures.

2016 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 126-131 ◽  
Author(s):  
Su Yeon Ko ◽  
Eun-Kyung Kim ◽  
Hee Jung Moon ◽  
Jung Hyun Yoon ◽  
Ha Yan Kim ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xuehua Xi ◽  
Ying Wang ◽  
Luying Gao ◽  
Yuxin Jiang ◽  
Zhiyong Liang ◽  
...  

BackgroundThe incidence and mortality of thyroid cancer, including thyroid nodules > 4 cm, have been increasing in recent years. The current evaluation methods are based mostly on studies of patients with thyroid nodules < 4 cm. The aim of the current study was to establish a risk stratification model to predict risk of malignancy in thyroid nodules > 4 cm.MethodsA total of 279 thyroid nodules > 4 cm in 267 patients were retrospectively analyzed. Nodules were randomly assigned to a training dataset (n = 140) and a validation dataset (n = 139). Multivariable logistic regression analysis was applied to establish a nomogram. The risk stratification of thyroid nodules > 4 cm was established according to the nomogram. The diagnostic performance of the model was evaluated and compared with the American College Radiology Thyroid Imaging Reporting and Data System (ACR TI-RADS), Kwak TI-RADS and 2015 ATA guidelines using the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC).ResultsThe analysis included 279 nodules (267 patients, 50.6 ± 13.2 years): 229 were benign and 50 were malignant. Multivariate regression revealed microcalcification, solid mass, ill-defined border and hypoechogenicity as independent risk factors. Based on the four factors, a risk stratified clinical model was developed for evaluating nodules > 4 cm, which includes three categories: high risk (risk value = 0.8-0.9, with more than 3 factors), intermediate risk (risk value = 0.3-0.7, with 2 factors or microcalcification) and low risk (risk value = 0.1-0.2, with 1 factor except microcalcification). In the validation dataset, the malignancy rate of thyroid nodules > 4 cm that were classified as high risk was 88.9%; as intermediate risk, 35.7%; and as low risk, 6.9%. The new model showed greater AUC than ACR TI-RADS (0.897 vs. 0.855, p = 0.040), but similar sensitivity (61.9% vs. 57.1%, p = 0.480) and specificity (91.5% vs. 93.2%, p = 0.680).ConclusionMicrocalcification, solid mass, ill-defined border and hypoechogenicity on ultrasound may be signs of malignancy in thyroid nodules > 4 cm. A risk stratification model for nodules > 4 cm may show better diagnostic performance than ACR TI-RADS, which may lead to better preoperative decision-making.


Endocrine ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raffaele Palladino ◽  
Ilaria Migliatico ◽  
Roberta Sgariglia ◽  
Mariantonia Nacchio ◽  
Antonino Iaccarino ◽  
...  

Abstract Purpose Nowadays, the clinical management of thyroid nodules needs to be multi-disciplinary. In particular, the crosstalk between endocrinologists and cytopathologists is key. When FNAs are properly requested by endocrinologists for nodules characterised by relevant clinical and ultrasound features, cytopathologists play a pivotal role in the diagnostic work-up. Conversely, improper FNA requests can lead to questionable diagnostic efficiency. Recently, recommendations to delay all non-urgent diagnostic procedures, such as thyroid FNAs, to contain the spread of COVID-19 infection, have made the interplay between endocrinologists and cytopathologists even more essential. The objective of this study was to assess the impact of COVID-19 pandemic on our practice by evaluating the total number of FNAs performed and the distribution of the Bethesda Categories before, during, and after the lockdown. Methods We analysed the FNA trends before (1st January 2019 to March 13th 2020), during (March 14th to May 15th), and after (May 16th to July 7th) the lockdown. Results Although the total number of weekly FNAs dropped from 62.1 to 23.1, our referring endocrinologists managed to prioritise patients with high-risk nodules. In fact, in the post-lockdown, the weekly proportion of benign diagnoses dropped on average by 12% and that of high-risk diagnoses increased by 6%. Conclusions The lesson we have learned so far from this pandemic is that by applying safety protocols to avoid contagion and by increasing the threshold for FNA requests for thyroid nodules, we can continue to guarantee our services to high-risk patients even in times of a health crisis.


Diagnostics ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 109
Author(s):  
Manuela Petersen ◽  
Simone A. Schenke ◽  
Jonas Firla ◽  
Roland S. Croner ◽  
Michael C. Kreissl

Purpose: To compare the diagnostic performance of thyroid imaging reporting and data system (TIRADS) in combination with shear wave elastography (SWE) for the assessment of thyroid nodules. Methods: A prospective study was conducted with the following inclusion criteria: preoperative B-mode ultrasound (US) including TIRADS classification (Kwak-TIRADS, EU-TIRADS), quantitative SWE and available histological results. Results: Out of 43 patients, 61 thyroid nodules were detected; 10 nodules were found to be thyroid cancer (7 PTC, 1 FTC, 2 HüCC) and 51 were benign. According to Kwak-TIRADS the majority of benign nodules (47 out of 51, 92.2%) were classified in the low-risk- and intermediate-risk class, four nodules were classified as high-risk (7.8%). When using EU-TIRADS, the benign nodules were distributed almost equally across all risk classes, 21 (41.2%) nodules were classified in the low-risk class, 16 (31.4%) in the intermediate-risk class and 14 (27.4%) in the high-risk class. In contrast, most of the malignant nodules (eight out of ten) were classified as high-risk on EU-TIRADS. One carcinoma was classified as low-risk and one as intermediate-risk nodule. For SWE, ROC analysis showed an optimal cutoff of 18.5 kPa to distinguish malignant and benign nodules (sensitivity 80.0%, specificity 49.0%, PPV 23.5% and NPV 92.6%). The addition of elastography resulted in an increase of accuracy from 65.6% to 82.0% when using Kwak-TIRADS and from 49.2% to 72.1% when using EU-TIRADS. Conclusion: Our data demonstrate that the combination of TIRADS and SWE seems to be superior for the risk stratification of thyroid nodules than each method by itself. However, verification of these results in a larger patient population is mandatory.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandr A Bubnov ◽  
Alexey A Trukhin ◽  
Pavel O Rumyantsev ◽  
Mikhail V Degtyarev ◽  
Yaroslaw I Sirota ◽  
...  

Abstract Purposes: Current research design is dedicated to 131-I SUV evaluation on post therapeutic scintigrams and setting up predictive model for radioiodine therapy repeated course prescription in differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC). Methods: Study includes 148 patients (f-105, m-43) with DTC treated with 131-iodine. Administered treatment activities of 131I calculated according to clinical features and tumor recurrence risk group. Patients were divided into three groups using ATA 2018 recommendations. Absolute risk groups: low risk (L), medium risk (M), high risk (H). Administered 131-I activity [MBq]: <AL> = 3223±729, <AM> = 3696±456, <AH> = 4589±1078; Tg [ng/ml]: <TgL> = 7,4±1.7 ng/ml, <TgM>= 14,8 ±5,9, <TgH> = 68,3 ±18,5; TgAb [IU/ml]: <TgAbL> = 124,3 ± 81.7, <TgAbM> = 29,2 ±15,9, <TgAbH> = 85,7 ±28,9. All null hypothesis were checked using paired Mann-Whitney U-test. Calibration of system SPECT/CT and evaluation SUVs completed according to protocols designed using Jaszczak phantom Deluxe. Model development based on logistic regression with ROC-analysis, regularization and cross-validation. Results: Reference intervals of SUVpeak and SUVmax calculated for all groups of risk. SUVpeak: low risk >155, medium risk 105-155, high risk 0-105 pL-M=0.069 pL-H=0.0037 pM-H=0.7514; SUVmax: low risk >38, medium risk 29-38, high risk 0-29 pL-M=0.052 pL-H=0.0033 pM-H=0.949. Logit model based on SUVpeak without regularization has: AUC = 0.67 (95%CI 0.33-1.00); Accuracy = 0.82; SE = 0.89; SP = 0.4; PPV = 0.41; NPV = 0.89, cross-validated AUC =0.67 (0.4-0.88), regression coefficients: B0=0.037, B1=0.001. Regularization (SUVpeak<100) lead to AUC = 0.75, (95%CI 0.44-1.00); accuracy = 0.89; SE =0.98; SP = 0.4; PPV = 0.76; NPV = 0.87, cross-validated AUC = 0.513 (0.36-0.71) regression coefficients: B0=0.473, B1=0.003.Conclusion: Study shows that SUV has wide range of values and can be matched with existed model of risk assessment of DTC. Algorithm of image segmentation and evaluation of SUVpeak and SUVmax for SPECT/CT systems was developed. According to the ROC analysis, developed predictive model shows an acceptable performance for further clinical investigation and advancement focused on refining model parameters and introducing additional predictors


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 3196-3196
Author(s):  
Luigi Gugliotta ◽  
Alessandra Iurlo ◽  
Gabriele Gugliotta ◽  
Alessia Tieghi ◽  
Anna Candoni ◽  
...  

Abstract Background. The therapeutic approach in thrombocythemic patients with Philadelphia negative chronic myeloproliferative neoplasms (Ph- MPN), in order to result cost-effective (primum non nocere), is commonly driven by the risk factors considered in the gradually updated guidelines. However, no studies were addressed to evaluate if and how the real-life therapeutic approach changed in the last decades. Objective. To evaluate, in a large series of thrombocythemic patients with Ph- MPN, the impact of clinical and biological characteristics at diagnosis on the therapeutic approach adopted before and after the publication of the Italian guidelines for essential thrombocythemia therapy [1]. Methods. The analysis considered, in the patients of the Registro Italiano Trombocitemie (RIT), the clinical and biological characteristics at diagnosis, and the treatment ongoing after 3, 6, 12, and >12 months from diagnosis (antiplatelet alone [AntiPLT]; cytoreductive alone [CYT]; CYT+AntiPLT). Results. The analyzed patients were 2418, 914 (38%) males and 1504 (62%) females, with a diagnosis (PVSG or WHO criteria) performed before and after 2005 in 51% and 49% of cases, respectively. The rate of ongoing treatment with AntiPLT, CYT, and CYT+AntiPLT increased as follows: at 3rd month 16%, 12%, and 31%; at 12th month 17%, 14%, and 39%; after 12 months 19%, 16%, and 55%, respectively. Patients treated with CYT or CYT+AntiPLT did not significantly differ in their characteristics at diagnosis. The analysis of data at the 3rd month (initial phase) showed that: 1) CYT±AntiPLT treatment, ongoing in 43% of patients, was significantly related, in univariate analysis, to male gender, older age, prior thrombosis, higher thrombocytosis, leukocytosis, higher HCT level, CVRFs, comorbidities, symptoms, splenomegaly, hepatomegaly, and bone marrow fibrosis grade >0 (no relationship with JAK2 V617F mutation, and prior hemorrhage); in multivariate analysis, it was significantly related to age >60 y, age 40-60 y, prior thrombosis, PLT >1000 x109/L, PLT 700-1000 x109/L, symptoms, and comorbidities. 2) patients with standard high risk (age >60 y, and/or prior thrombosis, and/or PLT >1500 x109/L ) were receiving CYT±AntiPLT (59%), AntiPLT (7%), and no treatment (34%). 3) patients with standard low risk were receiving CYT±AntiPLT (22%), AntiPLT (27%), and no treatment (51%). Low risk patients receiving CYT±AntiPLT had age 40-60 y (73%), CVRFs (59%), symptoms (53%), comorbidities (42%), PLT 1000-1500 x109/L (35%), PLT 700-1000 x109/L (42%), JAK2 V617F mutation (30%), WBC >10 x109/L (22%). 4) in patients receiving CYT±AntiPLT, the initial cytoreductive drug and the median age were: hydroxycarbamide (80%, 68 y), anagrelide (6%, 49 y), interferon alpha (9%, 42 y), pipobroman (2%, 72 y), busulfan (3%, 70 y). The AntiPLT drug mostly used was low dose ASA (86-90% of cases, at any age). 5) Patients diagnosed after 2005, compared with those diagnosed before, showed a higher rate of CYT±AntiPLT treatment when at standard high risk ( 64% vs 53 % p <0.001), and a higher rate of AntiPLT treatment both when at high risk (11% vs 3% p <0.001) and at low risk (39% vs 15%, p <0.001). Moreover, the rate of use of the specific drugs and median age did not significantly change. Conclusion. The initial (within the 3rd month) therapeutic approach in the thrombocythemic Ph- MPN patients of the RIT was after 2005 relatively compliant with the 2004 Italian guidelines. In fact, the rate of CYT±AntiPLT treatment in patients with standard high risk was higher than before (64% vs 53%, p<0.001). Nevertheless, the rate of untreated high risk patients remained rather high (34%). Moreover, 22% of patients with standard low risk received CYT±AntiPLT treatment, we surmise because they had supplementary characteristics (CVRFs, JAK2 V617F mutation, leukocytosis, age 40-60 y, and PLT 1000-1500 x109/L), considered as risk factors in clinical studies[2,3] and/or in recent risk scores [4,5]. [1] Barbui T et al. Haematologica 2004; [2] Harrison C et al. NEJM 2005; [3] Gisslinger H et al. NEJM 2013; [4] Passamonti F et al. Blood 2012; [5] Barbui T et al. Blood 2012 *The RIT is a project of the GIMEMA Foundation Disclosures Gugliotta: Shire : Honoraria.


2018 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 139
Author(s):  
S. Harricharan ◽  
K. Biederman ◽  
A.M. Bombassaro ◽  
A. Lazo-Langner ◽  
S. Elsayed ◽  
...  

Background A twice-weekly galactomannan (gm) screening protocol was implemented in high-risk hematology inpatients. Study objectives were to determine adherence to the protocol, use of selected resources, and patient outcomes.Methods This retrospective cohort study compared outcomes of interest before and after implementation of gm screening. Adults undergoing matched related allogeneic hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation or induction chemotherapy for acute leukemia were eligible. Patients could be enrolled more than once and were evaluated as episodes. Adherence to the gm protocol was assessed in post-implementation episodes. Use of broad-spectrum antifungals (bsafs), consultations (infectious diseases, respirology), and diagnostic procedures (computed tomography imaging, bronchoalveolar lavage) were compared between phases, as were the patient outcomes of all-cause mortality and clinical success (alive and not taking a bsaf).Results Of 182 episodes consecutively screened, 70 per phase were enrolled. Clinical characteristics and duration of assessment were similar for the phases. Full or partial adherence to the protocol was observed in 61 post implementation episodes (87%), with full adherence in 40 episodes (57%). More episodes in the pre-implementation phase than in the post-implementation phase involved receipt of bsafs, consultations, and diagnostics (27% vs. 7%, p = 0.02; 46% vs. 26%, p = 0.014; and 46% vs. 31%, p = 0.083 respectively). Although mortality was similar in the two phases, clinical success at the final assessment was observed in fewer pre-implementation than post-implementation episodes (79% vs. 98%, p < 0.001).Conclusions Implementation of a gm screening protocol was feasible and associated with significantly fewer episodes involving receipt of bsafs and consultations, and with significantly more episodes showing clinical success.


Radiology ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 276 (2) ◽  
pp. 579-587 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jung Hyun Yoon ◽  
Hye Sun Lee ◽  
Eun-Kyung Kim ◽  
Hee Jung Moon ◽  
Jin Young Kwak

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