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    Am J Surg. 2009 Mar;197(3):320-4.

    Incidental thyroid nodule: patterns of diagnosis and rate of malignancy.

    Source

    Department of Surgery, University Hospitals Case Medical Center, School of Medicine, Cleveland, OH, USA.

    Abstract

    BACKGROUND:

    The clinical significance of thyroid incidentalomas is controversial.

    METHODS:

    The rate of malignancy was determined for patients with an incidentally discovered thyroid nodule, and results were stratified according to imaging modality as well as presence and type of pre-existing malignancy.

    RESULTS:

    One hundred fifty patients were identified, of which 88 with a known malignancy were screened for metastases. Twenty-three (15%) patients were diagnosed with thyroid malignancy. Incidental nodules identified on positron emission tomography scan were malignant in 33% of the patients compared with 11% for those identified on computed axial tomography (P = .016). The rate of thyroid malignancy in patients with pre-existing nonthyroid malignancy (18%) was not significantly different from patients without a history of malignancy (13%, P = .36).

    COMMENTS:

    Thyroid incidentalomas are associated with a high rate of malignancy. The rate of malignancy is highest for nodules discovered on positron emission tomography scan and is no different in patients with or without pre-existing malignancy.

    PMID:
    19245908
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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