PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

Utility of including BRAF mutation analysis with ultrasonographic and cytological diagnoses in ultrasonography-guided fine-needle aspiration of thyroid nodules.

  • Da Som Kim,
  • Dong Wook Kim,
  • Young Jin Heo,
  • Jin Wook Baek,
  • Yoo Jin Lee,
  • Hye Jung Choo,
  • Young Mi Park,
  • Ha Kyoung Park,
  • Tae Kwun Ha,
  • Do Hun Kim,
  • Soo Jin Jung,
  • Ji Sun Park,
  • Ki Jung Ahn,
  • Hye Jin Baek,
  • Taewoo Kang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0202687
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 8
p. e0202687

Abstract

Read online

This study investigated the role of BRAF mutation analysis in thyroid fine-needle aspiration (FNA) samples compared to ultrasonographic and cytological diagnoses. A total 316 patients underwent ultrasonography (US)-guided FNA with BRAFV600E mutation analysis to diagnose thyroid nodules. One hundred sixteen patients with insufficient US images (n = 6), follow-up loss (n = 43), or unknown final diagnosis (n = 67) were excluded from the study. Comparisons between US diagnoses, cytological diagnoses, and BRAF mutation analysis were performed. Of 200 thyroid nodules, there was US diagnosis with 1 false negative and 11 false positive cases, cytological diagnosis with 10 false negative and 2 false positive cases, and BRAFV600E mutation analysis with 19 false negative and 2 false positive cases. The sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values, and accuracy of BRAFV600E mutation analysis were 83.2%, 98.1%, 97.5%, 86.6%, and 91%, respectively. Of the 18 nodules with Bethesda category III, 9 were true positive, 6 were true negative, 3 was a false negative, and none were false positive on BRAF mutation analysis. In conclusion, we recommend that BRAFV600E mutation analysis only be performed for evaluating thyroid nodules with Bethesda category III, regardless of US diagnosis.