Publication: Diagnostic accuracy of ultrasound for the evaluation of lateral compartment lymph nodes in papillary thyroid carcinoma
Program
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Çolakoğlu, Bülent
Alis, Deniz
Advisor
Publication Date
2020
Language
English
Type
Journal Article
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
Aims: To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of ultrasound (US) assessing the lateral compartment lymph node metastasis in patients with primary papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC), and to demonstrate the incidence and patterns of the lateral lymph node metastasis. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed 198 patients with primary PTC who underwent thyroidectomy in addition to modified lateral neck dissections (MLND) involving level II to level V due to clinically positive lateral neck disease. A skilled and experienced single operator performed all US examinations. Surgical pathology results were accepted as the reference method and sensitivity, specificity, and diagnostic accuracy of US in detecting metastatic lymph nodes established using level-by-level analysis. Results: In the study cohort, 10.1% of the patients had lateral compartment lymph node metastases without any central compartment involvement. For the lateral compartment, 48.5% had level II, 74.7% had level III, 64.6% had level IV, and 29.3% of the patients had level V metastasis. None of the patients had isolated level V metastasis. The sensitivity, specificity, and diagnostic accuracy of US in identifying lateral lymph compartment metastasis ranged from 87% to 91.4%, 92% to 98.6% 92.4% to 96%, respectively. However, the sensitivity (74.7%) and diagnostic accuracy (76.2%) of US significantly decreased for the central compartment while specificity (90%) remained similar. Conclusion: US performed by a skilled operator has an excellent diagnostic accuracy for the evaluation of lateral cervical lymph nodes in primary PTC; thus, might enable precise tailoring of the management strategies. Moreover, the high incidence of level V involvement favors MLND over selective approaches.
Description
Source:
Current Medical Imaging
Publisher:
Bentham Science Publ Ltd
Keywords:
Subject
Radiology, Nuclear medicine, Imaging systems in medicine