Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology
Endocrine Abstracts (2015) 37 EP923 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.37.EP923

ECE2015 Eposter Presentations Thyroid (non-cancer) (160 abstracts)

Histopathological results of suspicious nodules in the patients with Hashimoto thyroiditis

Sevilay Ozmen 1 , Ilknur Calik 1 , Yusuf Can 1 , Ozge Timur 2 , Ayse Carlioglu 3 , Hakan Sevimli 2 , Senay Arikan Durmaz 3 , Esref Kabalar 1 & Kenan Cadirci 2


1Department of Pathology, Erzurum, Training and Reserch Hospital, Turkey; 2Department of Internal Medicine, Training and Reserch Hospital, Erzurum, Turkey; 3Department of Endocrinology, Training and Reserch Hospital, Erzurum, Turkey.


Introduction and aim: The most endocrinologists in routine practice are used to Bethesda classification for evaluation of thyroid nodule in fine needle aspiration biopsy (FNA). It is accepted that FNA biopsy is an accurate diagnostic and gold standard test. However, false-positive diagnosis may sometimes occur as a patient with a ‘malign’ lesion is found incorrectly rather than an actually benign lesion on histological examination. Hashimoto’s thyroiditis probably is the most common cause of false-positive cytology. The aims of present study evaluate retrospectively postoperatively biopsy results in patients with Hashimoto disease have a thyroidectomy.

Materials and methods: Results of totally 29 patients with Hashimoto thyroiditis achieved from our hospital records. All of the patients had undergone totally or subtotals thyroidectomy. We re-evaluated retrospectively biopsy results postoperatively. We compared their preoperative FNA results.

Results: We detected 24.1% papillary thyroid cancer in seven patients (mean age 45.5±11.9 year), 44.8% nodular goitre in 13 patients (mean age 45.8±4.9 year), 13.7% adenomatous nodule in four patients (mean age 43.5±14.4 year), 3.4% hurtle cell adenoma in one patient with 56 years old. But, 14% in four patients with Hashimoto thyroiditis (mean age 41.5±13.1 year) were redundantly operated due to atypia of undetermined significance in FNA.

Conclusions: Although Hashimoto disease is a benign diagnosis, its misclassification as atypia of undetermined significance in FNA accounts for some false-positive errors. The cytopathologists can frequently be interpreted as atypia of undetermined significance instead of Hashimoto’s thyroiditis. Therefore, result of atypia of undetermined significance in FNA may lead unnecessarily concern among with the endocrinologists. More importantly, our results demonstrated that high papillary thyroid cancer rate was found postoperatively in suspicious nodules evolved background Hashimoto thyroiditis.

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