Korean J Endocr Surg.  2001 Apr;1(1):78-83. 10.16956/kjes.2001.1.1.78.

The Role of Fine-Needle Aspiration Cytology and Frozen Section in the Operative Management of Thyroid Nodule

Affiliations
  • 1Department of General Surgery, Gil Medical Center Gachon Medical School, Inchon, Korea. peacemk@ghil.com

Abstract

PURPOSE
Traditionally the extent of thyroidectomy in patients with nodular thyroid disease has been based on fine needle aspiration cytology and intraoperative frozen section examination. The value of routine frozen section examination for intraoperative diagnosis of thyroid cancer and determination of extent of thyroidectomy is controversial and needs to be evaluated.
METHODS
We reviewed the fine needle aspiration cytology, frozen section examination, and final pathology of 142 consecutive patients who underwent thyroidectomy for nodular thyroid mass in an 3-year period. The diagnosis were classified as indeterminant, benign, or malignant. The utility and impact of the diagnosis from fine needle aspiration or frozen section on the operative procedure performed was analyzed.
RESULTS
Fine needle aspiration cytology (FNA) as a diagnostic test for thyroid nodules demonstrated an indeterminant rate of 23.9% (34 patients), with diagnostic accuracy of 93.9% for malignant disease. In frozen section (FS) results, the indeterminant rate was 19.7%, and the diagnostic accuracy 98.3% for malignant disease. Of the 50 patients with the benign results on FNA, 3 patients was diagnosed as malignancy on FS. Of the 34 patients with indeterminant results on FNA, the intraoperative FS diagnosis showed 16 patients of benign, 3 patients of malignancy, and diagnosis on 15 patients was deferred to permanent section; in 15 patients, benign disease was diagnosed in 12 patients, and 3 patients were diagnosed as malignancy. And one of 10 patients with inadequate result on FNA was diagnosed as malignancy on FS. Therefore the decision about the extent of surgical thyroid resection was changed in 7 patients (4.9%) based on the FS results, and including the 16 patients diagnosed as benign on FS with indeterminant results on FNA, overall, in 23 patients (16.2%) the intraoperative surgical decision was affected by FS.
CONCLUSION
The fine needle aspiration cytology and intraoperative frozen section examination showed the limitation on diagnosis of follicular neoplasm, but intraoperative frozen section examination proved useful in determining the extent of operation and affected intraoperative decision making in thyroid surgery.

Keyword

Thyroid nodule; Fine needle aspiration cytology; Frozen section examination

MeSH Terms

Biopsy, Fine-Needle*
Decision Making
Diagnosis
Diagnostic Tests, Routine
Frozen Sections*
Humans
Pathology
Surgical Procedures, Operative
Thyroid Diseases
Thyroid Gland*
Thyroid Neoplasms
Thyroid Nodule*
Thyroidectomy

Cited by  1 articles

Can We Omit Intraoperative Frozen Section According to the Result of the Preoperative Fine-needle Aspiration Cytology of a Thyroid Nodule?
Jeong Yoon Song, Sang Ah Han, Jae Hoon Jang, Jun Woo Bong
Korean J Endocr Surg. 2015;15(4):79-85.    doi: 10.16956/kjes.2015.15.4.79.

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