Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology
Endocrine Abstracts (2014) 35 P594 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.35.P594

ECE2014 Poster Presentations Endocrine tumours and neoplasia (99 abstracts)

Comparison of elastography and conventional ultrasonography in the diagnostics of thyroid nodules, elastographic features of follicular lesions of undetermined significance

Martyna Wojtaszek-Nowicka 1 , Kamil Brzozowski 1 , Joanna Lukowska 1 , Stanisław Sporny 2 , Bozena Popowicz 1 , Mariusz Klencki 1 & Dorota Slowinska-Klencka 1


1Department of Morphometry of Endocrine Glands, Chair of Endocrinology, Medical University of Lodz, Lodz, Poland; 2Department of Dental Patomorphology, Chair of Patomorphology, Medical University of Lodz, Lodz, Poland.


Background: Elastography is a procedure that widen diagnostic ultrasonography (US) but its significance in thyroid diagnostics has not been settled.

Aim: Comparison of usefulness of elastography and conventional malignancy risk features (MRF) in the diagnostics of thyroid nodules, analysis of elastographic characteristics of follicular lesions of undetermined significance (FLUS).

Methods: Analysis included 38 benign lesions (BL), 15 malignant neoplasms (MN) and 67 FLUS. MRF (according to current recommendations), elastography score (ES) based on 4-grade scale of tissue stiffness and strain ratio (SR) of examined lesion and surrounding tissue were evaluated.

Results: MN more often than BL showed MRF>1 (66.7 vs 34.2%; P<0.05). Suspicious elastogram (ES>2) was observed in MN more often than in BL (65.5 vs 32.0; P<0.005). Relative risk (RR) of malignancy rose when SR>2 (RR=9; P<0.001); SR>2 was observed in MN more frequently than in BL (66.7 vs 29.7%; P<0.01). Moderate positive correlation between SR and ES was found (r=0.58; P<0.05), as well as low positive correlation between ES>2 and MRF>1 (tau b=0.28; P<0.05). MRF>1, ES>2, SR>2 sensitivity were similar (66.7; 65.5; 66.7% respectively). Combining both elastography parameters (ES>2 or SR>2) increased sensitivity of the elastography to 91.7%, specificity 51.4%. Adding MRF>1 feature did not significantly improve sensitivity (92.3%) yet it decreased specificity (34.3%). Using single elastography parameter associated with MRF>1 feature was also less effective (SR or MRF>1: sensitivity-91.7%, specificity-45.5%; ES or MRF>1: sensitivity-80.0%, specificity-47.4%). FLUS showed similar elastography features to BL (ES>2–27.1%, SR>2–24.8%) while being similar to MN in >1MRF evaluation (62.7%) and different from BL (P<0.01).

Conclusions: Sensitivity of single elastography or MRF is similar. Still, combining both ES and SR is more effective than MRF evaluation. Considering 5% malignancy risk in FLUS in our population, FLUS elastography characteristic is more reliable than MRF analysis.

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