Data on the prevalence of benign and malignant nodular thyroid disease in patients with acromegaly is a matter of debate. In the last decade an increasing incidence of thyroid cancer has been reported. The aim of this study was to evaluate the prevalence of goiter, thyroid nodules and thyroid cancer in a large series of patients with acromegaly with a cross-sectional study with a control group. Six Spanish university hospitals participated. One hundred and twenty three patients (50% men; mean age 59±13 years; disease duration 6.7±7.2 years) and 50 controls (51% males, mean age 58±15 years) were studied. All participants underwent thyroid ultrasound and fine needle aspiration. Cytological analysis was performed in suspicious nodules between 0.5 and 1.0 cm and in all nodules greater than 1.0 cm. Goiter was more frequently found in patients than in controls (24.9 vs. 8.3%, respectively; p<0.001). Nodular thyroid disease as well as nodules greater than 1 cm were also more prevalent in acromegalic patients (64.6%, vs. 28.6%, p<0.05 and 53.3 vs. 28.6%, respectively; p<0.05), and all underwent fine needle aspiration. Suspicious cytology was detected in 4 patients and in none of the controls. After thyroidectomy, papillary thyroid carcinoma was confirmed in two cases (3.3% of patients with thyroid nodules), representing 1.6% of the entire group of patients with acromegaly (2.4% including a case with previously diagnosed papillary thyroid carcinoma). These data indicated that thyroid nodular disease and cancer are increased in acromegaly, thus justifying its routine ultrasound screening.
To determine the relationship and the degree of agreement between radiographs and MR images for the existence of osteoid matrix and periosteal reactions in the initial diagnosis of osteosarcomas, the plain radiographs and MR studies of 54 patients with proven osteosarcoma were retrospectively evaluated. In each tumor the visualization and type of osseous matrix, periosteal reaction and Codman angle were recorded independently for both techniques and by consensus between two radiologists. In 37 tumors agreement existed regarding osteoid matrix and in 31 cases regarding periosteal reactions. The Kappa statistic showed a significant relationship between both tests (0.49 and 0.44, respectively). Both techniques were also not statistically different in the proportion of findings with the McNemar test. Therefore, the ability of MR images seems important in reporting the MR features of bone tumors. Identification of osteoid mineralization and periosteal reaction can also be used with MR in the diagnosis of osteosarcoma.
The purpose of this study was to relate the pathological and imaging features of dural enhancement and meningeal sign ("dural tail") on contrast-enhanced T1-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) images from patients with primary calvarial lesions as well to assess the accuracy of MR imaging in predicting dural invasion. Thirty-two calvarial tumors studied with contrast-enhanced MR imaging and histopathological examination of the dural specimens were reviewed. Sixteen patients presented dural enhancement, eight with tumor invasion. Tumoral invasion of the dura was observed in one case without enhancement. Malignant lesions showed enhanced dura more commonly than benign lesions (P=0.02). Nodular and discontinuous dural enhancement was statistically associated with dural invasion (P=0.05). Dural tail did not show a specific pathological association. Meningeal enhancement is a nonspecific reaction to calvarial lesions unless nodular and discontinuous. False-negative and -positive cases of dural invasion imply some limitation of contrast-enhanced MR imaging in predicting dural invasion by calvarial neoplasms.
Background: Accurate assessment of the extent of breast cancer with breast MRI (BMRI) yields additional findings (AF) that must be characterized in order to guide treatment. The aim of our study was to analyze the work-up of AF seen in pre-therapeutic BMRI and their impact on therapeutic approach and re-excision rates.Methods: From 07/2002 to 04/2007 we studied prospectively 465 consecutive patients with a diagnosis of breast cancer that underwent a pre-treatment BMRI to evaluate disease extent. BMRI studies were performed with a 1,0 and a 1,5 T magnet and coronal T2-weighted fast spin-echo and contrast-enchanced T1-weighted 3D gradient-echo sequences were evaluated. Post-processing included parametric, multiplanar reconstructions and maximum intensity projections. Fischer's scale was used to characterize additional lesions (AL). AL >5 mm were classified as: increase in tumor size, multifocal, multicentric and contralateral disease. AF that would potentially change therapeutic approach were re-evaluated with 2nd-look ultrasound (US), biopsied if found and/or marked with clips or with a radioisotope (ROLL). BI-RADS 3 lesions were followed up with BMRI. Gold standards were pathology reports and follow-up >2 years for benign lesions. Therapeutic change based on MRI findings was deemed correct in malignant AF and incorrect if pathology was benign. Re-excision rates and disease-free intervals were calculated.Results. A total of 280 AF were found in 222 (47,7%) patients. US studies were performed in 111 patients, in 99 of which the AL (89,1%) was found. 63 patients underwent biopsies and 48 of them (76,1%) were malignant. ROLL procedures were performed in 32 patients and malignancy rate was 65,6%. Follow-up BMRI studies for BI-RADS 3 lesions were performed in 42 patients (9%). BMRI found index lesions seen by mammography or US in 98,9% of the patients and did not find additional multifocal or multicentric disease in 10 patients, yielding a total negative predictive value of 96,7% for BMRI (6 invasive and 9 intraductal cancers). Therapeutic approach was changed in 107 patients (23%) and considered correct in 92 (86%) representing 19,7% of all patients and incorrect in 15 (14%) corresponding to 3,2% of the total. Re-excision due to positive margins during the first 6 months was performed in 39/323 patients treated with conservative surgery (re-excision rate of 12%). Mean follow-up was 48,4 months (m) (6,7-81,4 m) and mean disease-free interval was 45 m (6,7-81,4 m).Conclusion: Work-up of AF diagnosed in BMRI allows accurate treatment adjusted to disease extent in 96,8% of the patients. Additional work-up using US and close correlation with the rest of conventional modalities is the mandatory behaviour to ensure an integrated evaluation of AF. This policy allows a correct treatment in 86% of the patients with potential therapeutic change. Overtreatment was induced in 14% of these patients. Regarding the overall series of 465 patients submitted to BMRI, the 15 patients who were overtreated represent 3,2% of the total. The precision level of preoperative MRI in this scenario is clearly superior to conventional modalities when combined in an integrated multimodality approach. Citation Information: Cancer Res 2009;69(24 Suppl):Abstract nr 4023.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.