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Diagnosis and Reporting of Follicular-Patterned Thyroid Lesions by Fine Needle Aspiration

Over the past 3 decades, fine needle aspiration (FNA) has developed as the most accurate and cost-effective initial method for guiding the clinical management of patients with thyroid nodules. Thyroid FNA specimens containing follicular-patterned lesions are the most commonly encountered and include...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Faquin, William C.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Humana Press Inc 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2807535/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20596996
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12105-009-0104-7
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author Faquin, William C.
author_facet Faquin, William C.
author_sort Faquin, William C.
collection PubMed
description Over the past 3 decades, fine needle aspiration (FNA) has developed as the most accurate and cost-effective initial method for guiding the clinical management of patients with thyroid nodules. Thyroid FNA specimens containing follicular-patterned lesions are the most commonly encountered and include various forms of benign thyroid nodules, follicular carcinomas, and the follicular variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma. Based primarily upon the cytoarchitectural pattern, FNA is used as a screening test for follicular-patterned lesions to identify the majority of patients with benign nodules who can be managed without surgical intervention. The terminology and reporting of thyroid FNA results have been problematic due to significant variation between laboratories, but the recent multidisciplinary NCI Thyroid FNA State of the Science Conference has provided a seven-tiered diagnostic solution. A key element of this approach is the category “atypical cells of undetermined significance” (ACUS) which is used for those aspirates which cannot be easily classified as benign, suspicious, or malignant. Lesions in this category represent approximately 3–6% of thyroid FNAs and have a risk of malignancy intermediate between the “benign” category and the “suspicious for a follicular neoplasm” category. The recommended follow-up for an ACUS diagnosis is clinical correlation and in most cases, repeat FNA sampling.
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spelling pubmed-28075352010-02-16 Diagnosis and Reporting of Follicular-Patterned Thyroid Lesions by Fine Needle Aspiration Faquin, William C. Head Neck Pathol Proceedings of the 2009 North American Society of Head and Neck Pathology Companion Meeting (Boston, Ma) Over the past 3 decades, fine needle aspiration (FNA) has developed as the most accurate and cost-effective initial method for guiding the clinical management of patients with thyroid nodules. Thyroid FNA specimens containing follicular-patterned lesions are the most commonly encountered and include various forms of benign thyroid nodules, follicular carcinomas, and the follicular variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma. Based primarily upon the cytoarchitectural pattern, FNA is used as a screening test for follicular-patterned lesions to identify the majority of patients with benign nodules who can be managed without surgical intervention. The terminology and reporting of thyroid FNA results have been problematic due to significant variation between laboratories, but the recent multidisciplinary NCI Thyroid FNA State of the Science Conference has provided a seven-tiered diagnostic solution. A key element of this approach is the category “atypical cells of undetermined significance” (ACUS) which is used for those aspirates which cannot be easily classified as benign, suspicious, or malignant. Lesions in this category represent approximately 3–6% of thyroid FNAs and have a risk of malignancy intermediate between the “benign” category and the “suspicious for a follicular neoplasm” category. The recommended follow-up for an ACUS diagnosis is clinical correlation and in most cases, repeat FNA sampling. Humana Press Inc 2009-02-22 /pmc/articles/PMC2807535/ /pubmed/20596996 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12105-009-0104-7 Text en © Humana 2009
spellingShingle Proceedings of the 2009 North American Society of Head and Neck Pathology Companion Meeting (Boston, Ma)
Faquin, William C.
Diagnosis and Reporting of Follicular-Patterned Thyroid Lesions by Fine Needle Aspiration
title Diagnosis and Reporting of Follicular-Patterned Thyroid Lesions by Fine Needle Aspiration
title_full Diagnosis and Reporting of Follicular-Patterned Thyroid Lesions by Fine Needle Aspiration
title_fullStr Diagnosis and Reporting of Follicular-Patterned Thyroid Lesions by Fine Needle Aspiration
title_full_unstemmed Diagnosis and Reporting of Follicular-Patterned Thyroid Lesions by Fine Needle Aspiration
title_short Diagnosis and Reporting of Follicular-Patterned Thyroid Lesions by Fine Needle Aspiration
title_sort diagnosis and reporting of follicular-patterned thyroid lesions by fine needle aspiration
topic Proceedings of the 2009 North American Society of Head and Neck Pathology Companion Meeting (Boston, Ma)
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2807535/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20596996
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12105-009-0104-7
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