4.7 Article

Computed tomography complements ultrasound for the differential diagnosis of traumatic neuroma from recurrent tumor in patients with postoperative thyroid cancer

Journal

EUROPEAN RADIOLOGY
Volume 32, Issue 4, Pages 2760-2768

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00330-021-08321-x

Keywords

Thyroid cancer; Lymph nodes; Neck dissection; Neuroma

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This study evaluated the complementary role of CT in aiding the differentiation between traumatic neuromas and recurrent tumors in postoperative thyroid cancer patients, finding that CT corrected false-positive and false-negative diagnoses, potentially avoiding unnecessary procedures.
Objectives Traumatic neuromas (TNs) mimic recurrent tumors in US after total thyroidectomy (TT) and lateral neck dissection (LND) for thyroid cancer. We aimed to evaluate whether CT could complement US in the differential diagnosis of TNs from recurrent thyroid cancer in the dissected neck. Material and methods We retrospectively included a total of 97 consecutive US-detected lesions (28 TNs and 69 recurrent tumors) in patients with a previous history of TT and LND for thyroid cancer. The lesions were classified as benign, indeterminate, or suspicious according to the presence of benign or suspicious features on US and CT. Imaging features and categories on US and CT were compared between TNs and recurrent tumors. The diagnostic performances of US and CT for differentiating between TNs and recurrent tumors were calculated. Results On US, most TNs and recurrent tumors showed internal hyperechogenicity without hilar echogenicity or hilar vascularity and were categorized as suspicious lesions (23/28, 82.1% vs. 53/69, 76.8%). On CT, all TNs lacked strong enhancement without hilar fat or hilar vessel enhancement and were categorized as indeterminate lesions (28/28, 100%). In contrast, most recurrent tumors showed strong enhancement and were categorized as suspicious lesions (63/69, 91.3%). The addition of CT to US corrected 23 false-positive diagnoses in 28 TNs and 10 false-negative diagnoses in 69 recurrent tumors. Conclusions CT complements US for the correct differentiation of TNs from recurrent tumors in postoperative thyroid cancer patients. The addition of CT to US may prevent unnecessary painful biopsy or surgery.

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