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Beyond malignancy risk stratification: FNAC report anticipates thyroid cancer staging. Insights from recent studies. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Fine-needle-aspiration-cytology (FNAC) is a safe and cost-effective method for assessing thyroid nodules, but indeterminate cytology (ITN) sometimes requires further diagnostic surgery.
  • Recent studies from Europe and the U.S. suggest that thyroid cancer (TC) behaves differently based on pre-surgical FNAC results, with ITN cases showing less aggressive characteristics compared to more suspicious diagnoses.
  • A commentary involving thyroid experts highlights the consistent finding that TC with ITN diagnosis has lower rates of complications and mutations, indicating a need to consider less aggressive treatment options for these patients.

Article Abstract

Fine-needle-aspiration-cytology (FNAC) is safe and cost-effective procedure for evaluating thyroid nodules. The non-negligible rate of indeterminate cytology (ITN), warrants diagnostic surgery for histological assessment, in some cases. Two recent studies (from Europe and the U.S.) reported that the clinical behavior of a histologically proven thyroid cancer (TC) varies according to its pre-surgical FNAC results. Despite differences in study design, inclusion criteria, and the use of different cytology classification systems (Italian and Bethesda), the overall results were comparable. In order to further discuss these results and to provide additional perspective on the topic, the senior authors of the two studies invited other thyroid experts and cytologists not involved in the previous studies to participate in the present commentary. The strong, consistent clinical message that emerges, especially regarding PTC, is that TC with an initial diagnosis of ITN has a less aggressive clinical presentation, lower rates of: i) lymph-node metastasis; ii) more aggressive variants; iii) BRAFV600E mutations, as compared with DTC with an initial diagnosis of "suspicious for malignancy" or "malignant". These results were consistent in both studies and strongly point toward a more indolent clinical phenotype of DTC with a preoperative diagnosis of ITN as opposed to suspicious for malignancy or malignant. Further understanding the clinical implications of these data appears of clinical relevance and will be discussed from both the endocrinologist and cytologist point of view. The here overviewed data provide the foundation for beginning to examine the impact of less aggressive therapies for TC with an initial ITN diagnosis.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/clinem/dgae675DOI Listing

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