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Fine-needle aspiration of follicular lesions of the thyroid. Diagnosis and follow-Up

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TLDR
It is important to divide follicular patterned lesions of thyroid into FON and FDN in the cytology specimens due to significantly different risk of malignancy, and clinical features, including gender and age can be part of the decision analysis in selecting patients for surgery.
Abstract
The differential diagnosis of a follicular lesion/neoplasm in thyroid FNA specimens includes hyperplastic/adenomatoid nodule, follicular adenoma and carcinoma, and follicular variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma. In our laboratory we separate follicular lesions of thyroid into hyperplastic/adenomatoid nodule (HN), follicular neoplasm (FON) and follicular derived neoplasm with focal nuclear features suspicious for papillary thyroid carcinoma (FDN). This study reports our experience with 339 cases diagnosed as FON and 120 as FDN. All cases were evaluated for histologic diagnosis, age, sex and size of the nodule. Histopathologic follow-up was available in all cases. The malignancy rate was 22% (74/359) and 72% (86/120) for cases diagnosed as FON and FDN, respectively. In the FON category almost half of the malignant cases were papillary carcinoma. The risk of malignancy was higher in patients younger than 40 yr (53% vs. 30%) than in patients 40 year or more years old and greater in males (41% vs. 33%) than females. No statistically significant relationship was noted between the sizes of the nodules and benign vs. malignant diagnosis. According to this study it is important to divide follicular patterned lesions of thyroid into FON and FDN in the cytology specimens due to significantly different risk of malignancy (22% vs. 72%). In addition, clinical features, including gender and age can be part of the decision analysis in selecting patients for surgery.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Bethesda System for Reporting Thyroid Cytopathology.

TL;DR: The project participants hope that the adoption of this framework will facilitate communication among cytopathologists, endocrinologists, surgeons, and radiologists; facilitate cytologic-histologic correlation for thyroid diseases; facilitate research into the understanding of Thyroid diseases; and allow easy and reliable sharing of data from different laboratories for national and international collaborative studies.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Bethesda System for Reporting Thyroid Cytopathology

TL;DR: The conclusions regarding terminology and morphologic criteria from the NCI meeting led to the Bethesda Thyroid Atlas Project and form the framework for The Bethesda System for Reporting Thyroid Cytopathology (TBSRTC), a flexible framework for communication and research into thyroid diseases.
Journal ArticleDOI

The 2017 Bethesda System for Reporting Thyroid Cytopathology.

TL;DR: The Bethesda System for Reporting Thyroid Cytopathology (TBSRTC) established a standardized, category-based reporting system for thyroid fine-needle aspiration specimens, and the 2017 revision reaffirms that every thyroid FNA report should begin with one of six diagnostic categories.
Journal Article

The Armed Forces Institute of Pathology.

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Journal Article

The Armed Forces Institute of Pathology.

Journal ArticleDOI

Diagnosis of "follicular neoplasm": a gray zone in thyroid fine-needle aspiration cytology.

TL;DR: Clinical features that may help in predicting malignancy in patients with an FNA diagnosis of follicular neoplasm, including gender, nodule size, and age, can be a part of the decision analysis in selecting patients for surgery.
Book

Surgical pathology of the thyroid

TL;DR: This book explains what you always wanted to know about thyroid pathology but were afraid to ask and uses cytology and needle biopsy special techniques in their use in thyroid pathology diagnosis.
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