AI Article Synopsis

  • The American College of Radiology (ACR) developed the Thyroid Imaging Reporting and Data System (TI-RADS) to improve thyroid ultrasound evaluations and predict the likelihood of cancer in thyroid nodules using a scoring system from TR1 to TR5 based on various ultrasound features.* -
  • An analysis of 361 thyroid nodules with available ACR TI-RADS reports revealed that most nodules fell into the TR4 and TR3 categories, with no nodules classified as TR2 or TR3 corresponding to malignant cytology (Bethesda category VI).* -
  • The study found a correlation between TI-RADS categories and cytology results, indicating that higher TI-RADS scores (TR4 and TR5) were associated

Article Abstract

Background: Ultrasound has become the initial approach to evaluating thyroid nodules, facilitating the distinction between benign and malignant nodules based on composition, echogenicity, nodule border or margin, shape, the presence of calcifications, and nodule dimensions. The American College of Radiology (ACR) recommended the Thyroid Imaging Reporting and Data System (TI-RADS) as a classification system to standardize thyroid ultrasound reports and to predict the probability of malignancy in thyroid nodules using a scoring system (TR1-TR5) based on multiple ultrasound characteristics and nodule size. Fine-needle aspiration (FNA) is recommended as the next step for nodules that warrant further workup. The authors assessed the accuracy of the ACR TI-RADS based on the corresponding FNA cytology results (Bethesda system diagnoses I-VI).

Methods: ACR TI-RADS ultrasound reports and corresponding FNA cytology diagnoses from January 1, 2018 to August 30, 2018 were evaluated.

Results: From January 1, 2018 to August 30, 2018, 2306 thyroid ultrasound-guided FNAs were performed at our institution. Of 2306 cases, 361 had ACR TI-RADS reports available. The majority of FNAs were TR4 (180; 49.9%) or TR3 (108; 29.9%). No TR2 or TR3 nodules were associated with Bethesda category V or VI diagnoses. The majority of TR4 nodules (142 of 180; 78.9%) and TR5 nodules (42 of 65; 64.6%) exhibited benign (Bethesda category II) cytology. Fourteen TR5 cases (21.5%) had malignant (Bethesda category VI) cytology.

Conclusions: Although there were no TR2 or TR3 malignant (Bethesda category VI) diagnoses, and there were only a few malignancies in the TR4 and TR5 categories, the current results reassert the notion that the ACR TI-RADS scoring system shows at least some correlation between benign or malignant cytology diagnoses, as illustrated by the greater number of malignant cases in the higher ACR TI-RADS categories.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cncy.22254DOI Listing

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