Subtype of atypia on cytology and risk of malignancy in pediatric thyroid nodules

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Thyroid nodules with atypia of undetermined significance (AUS) are challenging to manage because of their intermediate risk of malignancy. Subclassification of atypia can refine malignancy risk in adult AUS nodules but has not been evaluated in children. METHODS: This was a retrospective cohort study of pediatric patients (<19 years old) who underwent fine-needle aspiration (FNA) of a thyroid nodule with resulting AUS cytology. Atypia was subclassified as nuclear only, architectural only, nuclear and architectural, or oncocytic. The primary outcome was the association between atypia subtype and malignancy. A secondary outcome was the association of atypia subtype with repeat FNA cytology. RESULTS: Sixty-eight AUS nodules in 61 patients were analyzed. The median age at FNA was 16.2 years (range, 9.8-18.9 years). Twenty-four nodules (35%) were malignant. Nuclear atypia only was present in 17 nodules (25%), architectural atypia only was present in 27 nodules (40%), nuclear and architectural atypia was present in 20 nodules (29%), and predominantly oncocytic features were present in 4 nodules (6%). The presence of nuclear atypia was associated with a significantly increased rate of malignancy (22 of 37 [59%] vs 2 of 31 [6.5%]; P

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Cherella, C. E., Hollowell, M. L., Smith, J. R., Zendejas, B., Modi, B. P., Cibas, E. S., & Wassner, A. J. (2022). Subtype of atypia on cytology and risk of malignancy in pediatric thyroid nodules. Cancer Cytopathology, 130(5), 330–335. https://doi.org/10.1002/cncy.22544

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