AI Article Synopsis

  • Family history of thyroid cancer is linked to a higher risk of extrathyroidal extension (ETE) and multifocality in thyroid malignancies, prompting some experts to recommend more aggressive surgical techniques.* -
  • This study aimed to determine if neck ultrasonography could effectively identify or rule out multifocality and ETE in patients with a first-degree relative who had thyroid cancer.* -
  • Results showed that while ultrasonography has some predictive value for multifocality and ETE, it is not reliable enough to exclude these features before surgery, suggesting that negative ultrasound findings do not guarantee the absence of these complications.*

Article Abstract

Family history of thyroid cancer increases the risk of harboring thyroid malignancies that end up having extrathyroidal extension (ETE) and multifocality on histology; some authors suggest a more aggressive surgical approach. Their pre-operative identification could allow more conservative surgical procedures if none of these features are suspected. Our aim was to assess if neck ultrasonography could identify or exclude multifocality or ETE in these patients to tailor the extent of surgery. This retrospective study included patients with previous thyroid surgery, ≥1 first-grade relative with thyroid cancer, and who had undergone pre-surgical ultrasound. ETE was suspected in the case of thyroid border interruption or gross invasion of perithyroidal tissues. Multiple suspicious nodules were defined as suspicion of multifocal cancer. The cohort consisted of 45 patients (median age 49 years, 40 with thyroid cancer, 30 females). The positive predictive value of ultrasonography in predicting multifocality and ETE was 57.14% (25.25-84.03) and 41.67% (21.5-65.1%), respectively, while the negative predictive values were 63.2% (56.4-69.4%) and 72.7% (63.3-80.5%). Pre-operative ultrasound examination is unable to reliably identify or exclude multifocal disease or extrathyroidal extension. In patients scheduled for surgery and with a first-degree relative affected by DTC, a "negative" pre-operative US report does not exclude the potential finding of multifocality and ETE at final histopathology.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8624166PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm10225277DOI Listing

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