J Korean Surg Soc.
2000 Nov;59(5):590-595.
Diagnostic Value of Fine-Needle Aspiration Cytology in the Operative Management of Thyroid Nodules
- Affiliations
-
- 1Department of Surgery, College of Medicine, Hanyang University, Seoul, Korea.
Abstract
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PURPOSE: Fine-needle aspiration cytology (FNA) and frozen section biopsy
(FS) have been used for the purpose of distinguishing benign lesions from
malignancies and for deciding the operative procedures to be used in the
management of the thyroid nodules. We performed this study the diagnostic
value of the FNA, the need for the FS in intraoperative procedures, and to
determine their values in deciding the extent of surgery. METHODS: The medical
records of 365 consecutive patients who had undergone surgery for thyroid
nodules at the Department of Surgery, Hanyang University Hospital, between
Jan. 1996 and Dec. 1998 were reviewed retrospectively. FNA and FS were
performed on all patients who underwent thyroid surgery during this period.
Among them, 35 patients who were diagnosed as insufficient for diagnosis by
FNA were excluded. RESULTS: Definitive histopathological diagnosis revealed
benign lesions in 232 patients and malignancies in 98. A borderline group
consisted of patients whose specimen were interpreted as follicular neoplasms
by FNA and FS. Overall results for FNA and FS were: sensitivity, 98 versus
100; specificity, 97 versus 99; diagnostic accuracy, 97 versus 99%. Five patients
who were diagnosed with benign lesions by FNA were rediagnosed by FS as
having malignant lesions. The tinal diagnosis was a papillary carcinoma. Of the
45 patients who were interpreted borderline by FNA, 7 patients had benign
lesions, and 38 were borderline by FS. Finally, 34 patients were diagnosed as
having benign lesions and 11 as having malignancies. CONCLUSION: FNA has a
high diagnostic accuracy for differentiatve diagnosis in the thyroid nodules. FS
may be unnecessary for patients whose FNA results indicate malignancy
especially papillary carcinoma, so routine use of FS for patients who were
diagnosed as having a papillary carcinoma by FNA may be omitted. If FNA
results
are borderline, FS may be helpful to confirm a follicular neoplasm. If FNA
indicates benign, FS seems to be necessary to decide the extent of surgery.