Department of Otolaryngology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
Division of Pediatric Otolaryngology, UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
Laryngoscope. 2023 Sep;133(9):2394-2401. doi: 10.1002/lary.30425. Epub 2022 Oct 17.
To assess the validity of the American College of Radiology Thyroid Imaging Reporting and Data System (ACR TI-RADS) for evaluating thyroid nodules in children.
Patients aged <19 years with thyroid nodule(s) evaluated by ultrasound (US) from 2007-2018 at a tertiary children's hospital were included. Two radiologists scored de-identified thyroid US images using ACR TI-RADS (from 1, "benign" to 5, "highly suspicious"). The radiologists recorded size and rated vascularity for each nodule. Ultrasound findings were compared to pathology results (operative cases, n = 91) and clinical follow-up without disease progression (non-operative cases, n = 15).
Thyroid images from 115 patients were reviewed. Nine patients were excluded due to the absence of an evaluable nodule. Forty-seven benign and 59 malignant nodules were included. Median age at ultrasound was 15 years (range 0.9-18 years). Twenty (18.9%) patients were male. There was moderate agreement between TI-RADS levels assigned by the two raters (kappa = 0.57, p < 0.001). When the raters' levels were averaged, >3 as the threshold for malignancy correctly categorized the greatest percentage of nodules (68.9%). Eleven (18.6%) malignant nodules received a TI-RADS level of 2 (n = 3) or 3 (n = 8). Sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values were 81.4%, 53.2%, 68.6%, and 69.4%, respectively. Although not part of TI-RADS, vascularity was similar between benign and malignant nodules (p = 0.56).
In a pediatric population, TI-RADS can help distinguish between benign and malignant nodules with comparable sensitivity and specificity to adults. However, the positive and negative predictive values suggest TI-RADS alone cannot eliminate the need for FNA.
3 Laryngoscope, 133:2394-2401, 2023.
评估美国放射学院甲状腺影像报告和数据系统(ACR TI-RADS)在评估儿童甲状腺结节中的有效性。
纳入 2007 年至 2018 年期间在一家三级儿童医院接受超声(US)检查的年龄<19 岁的甲状腺结节患者。两名放射科医生使用 ACR TI-RADS(从 1“良性”到 5“高度可疑”)对去识别甲状腺 US 图像进行评分。放射科医生记录每个结节的大小和血管化程度。将超声结果与病理结果(手术病例,n=91)和无疾病进展的临床随访(非手术病例,n=15)进行比较。
共回顾了 115 名患者的甲状腺图像。由于缺乏可评估的结节,有 9 名患者被排除在外。包括 47 个良性和 59 个恶性结节。超声检查时的中位年龄为 15 岁(范围 0.9-18 岁)。20 名(18.9%)患者为男性。两名评分者分配的 TI-RADS 水平之间存在中度一致性(kappa=0.57,p<0.001)。当两名评分者的水平平均时,>3 作为恶性的阈值正确分类了最大比例的结节(68.9%)。11 个(18.6%)恶性结节的 TI-RADS 水平为 2(n=3)或 3(n=8)。敏感性、特异性、阳性预测值和阴性预测值分别为 81.4%、53.2%、68.6%和 69.4%。尽管不属于 TI-RADS,但良性和恶性结节的血管化程度相似(p=0.56)。
在儿科人群中,TI-RADS 可以帮助区分良性和恶性结节,其敏感性和特异性与成人相似。然而,阳性和阴性预测值表明,TI-RADS 单独不能消除对细针抽吸活检的需求。
3 级喉镜,133:2394-2401,2023。