Journal of Pathology and Translational Medicine (Nov 2024)

Fine needle aspiration cytology diagnoses of follicular thyroid carcinoma: results from a multicenter study in Asia

  • Hee Young Na,
  • Miyoko Higuchi,
  • Shinya Satoh,
  • Kaori Kameyama,
  • Chan Kwon Jung,
  • Su-Jin Shin,
  • Shipra Agarwal,
  • Jen-Fan Hang,
  • Yun Zhu,
  • Zhiyan Liu,
  • Andrey Bychkov,
  • Kennichi Kakudo,
  • So Yeon Park

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4132/jptm.2024.10.12
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 58, no. 6
pp. 331 – 340

Abstract

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Background This study was designed to compare diagnostic categories of thyroid fine needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) and incidence of thyroid tumors in the multi-institutional Asian series with a special focus on diagnostic category IV (suspicious for a follicular neoplasm) and follicular thyroid carcinomas (FTCs). Methods Distribution of FNAC categories, incidence of thyroid tumors in resection specimens and cytologic diagnoses of surgically confirmed follicular adenomas (FAs) and FTCs were collected from 10 institutes from five Asian countries and were compared among countries and between FAs and FTCs. Results The frequency of category IV diagnoses (3.0%) in preoperative FNAC were significantly lower compared to those in Western countries (10.1%). When comparing diagnostic categories among Asian countries, category IV was more frequent in Japan (4.6%) and India (7.9%) than in Taiwan (1.4%), Korea (1.4%), and China (3.6%). Similarly, incidence of FAs and FTCs in surgical resection specimens was significantly higher in Japan (10.9%) and India (10.1%) than in Taiwan (5.5%), Korea (3.0%), and China (2.5%). FTCs were more commonly diagnosed as category IV in Japan (77.5%) than in Korea (33.3%) and China (35.0%). Nuclear pleomorphism, nuclear crowding, microfollicular pattern, and dyshesive cell pattern were more common in FTCs compared with FAs. Conclusions Our study highlighted the difference in FNAC diagnostic categories of FTCs among Asian countries, which is likely related to different reporting systems and thyroid cancer incidence. Cytologic features such as nuclear pleomorphism, nuclear crowding, microfollicular pattern, and dyshesive cell pattern were found to be useful in diagnosing FTCs more effectively.

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