Thyroid Nodule Characterization: Overview and State of the Art of Diagnosis with Recent Developments, from Imaging to Molecular Diagnosis and Artificial Intelligence
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Clinical Evaluation and Laboratory Evaluation of Patients with Thyroid Nodules
- Patients younger than 20 or older than 70 years of age;
- Male patients;
- Signs of dysphagia or dysphonia;
- History of neck irradiation;
- Previous thyroid carcinoma in the same patient;
- A firm, hard, or immobile nodule upon palpation;
- Cervical lymphadenopathy upon palpation.
- Family history of autoimmune disease (e.g., Hashimoto’s thyroiditis);
- Family history of benign thyroid nodule or goiter;
- Thyroid hormonal dysfunction (hypothyroidism or hyperthyroidism);
- Nodule that provokes pain or tenderness;
- A soft, smooth, and mobile nodule upon palpation [12].
3. Imaging
3.1. Ultrasound
3.2. Color Doppler US
3.3. Contrast-Enhanced US
3.4. Elastography
4. US Classification Systems
4.1. The Thyroid Imaging Reporting and Data System of the American College of Radiology (ACR TI-RADS)
- Composition: cystic or completely cystic, 0 points; spongiform, 0 points; mixed cystic and solid, 1 point; solid or almost completely solid, 2 points.
- Echogenicity: anechoic, 0 points; hyper- or isoechoic, 1 point; hypoechoic, 2 points; very hypoechoic, 3 points.
- Shape (assessed on the transverse plane): wider than tall, 0 points; taller than wide, 3 points.
- Margins: smooth, 0 points; ill-defined, 0 points; lobulated or irregular, 2 points; extrathyroidal extension, 3 points.
- Echogenic foci: none, 0 points; large comet tail artifacts, 0 points; macrocalcification, 1 point; peripheral or rim calcifications, 2 points; punctate echogenic foci, 3 points [9].
- TR1: no FNA;
- TR2: no FNA;
- TR3: if ≥1.5 cm, follow-up; if ≥2.5 cm, FNA; follow-up US at 1, 3, and 5 years;
- TR4: if ≥1.0 cm, follow-up; if ≥1.5 cm, FNA; follow-up US at 1, 2, 3, and 5 years;
- TR5: if ≥0.5 cm, follow-up; if ≥1.0 cm, FNA; US follow-up every year for the next 5 years.
4.2. American Thyroid Association (ATA) Management Guidelines for Adult Patients with Thyroid Nodules and Differentiated Thyroid Cancer
- Benign US pattern (0% risk of malignancy): no FNAB required;
- Extremely low-suspicion US pattern (<3% risk of malignancy): FNAB if ≥2 cm (or US follow-up);
- Low-suspicion pattern (5–10% risk of malignancy): FNAB if ≥1.5 cm;
- Intermediate-suspicion pattern (10–20% risk of malignancy): FNAB if ≥1 cm;
- High-suspicion pattern (>70–90% risk of malignancy): FNAB if ≥1 cm.
- Benign pattern (0% risk of malignancy): completely cystic nodules with fine walls;
- Extremely low-suspicion pattern (<3% risk of malignancy): spongiform nodules and nodules with interspersed cystic spaces and no features of the higher-level patterns;
- Low-suspicion pattern (5–10% risk of malignancy): isoechoic or hyperechoic nodules, or partially cystic nodules with a peripheral solid component, and no features of the higher-level patterns;
- Intermediate-suspicion pattern (10–20% risk of malignancy): hypoechoic solid nodules with smooth margins and no features of the higher-level patterns;
- High-suspicion pattern (>70–90% risk): solid hypoechoic nodules or solid hypoechoic components of partially cystic nodules, with at least one of these features: microcalcifications, irregular margins (infiltrative, microlobulated), extrathyroidal extension, a taller-than-wide shape, rim calcifications with an extrusive soft tissue component, or lymphadenopathy.
4.3. Korean Society of Thyroid Radiology (KSThR): Thyroid Imaging, Reporting and Data System (K-TIRADS)
- K-TIRADS 1: No nodule.
- K-TIRADS 2: Benign category:
- Iso-/hyperechoic spongiform;
- Partially cystic nodule with intracystic echogenic foci and comet tail artifact;
- Pure cyst malignancy risk is <3%. No biopsy indicated.
- K-TIRADS 3: Low-suspicion category: Partially cystic or iso-/hyperechoic nodule without any of the three suspicious US features. Malignancy risk is 3–10%. Biopsy indicated at >2 cm.
- K-TIRADS 4: Intermediate suspicion:
- Solid hypoechoic nodules with no other suspicious US pattern;
- Partially cystic or iso-/hyperechoic nodule with any of the three suspicious US characteristics;
- Completely calcified nodule malignancy risk is 10–40%. Biopsy indicated at >1 or 1.5 cm.
- K-TIRADS 5: High suspicion: Solid hypoechoic nodule with any of the three suspicious US features (punctate echogenic foci, nonparallel orientation, and irregular margins). Malignancy risk is >60%. Biopsy indicated at >1 cm.
4.4. European Thyroid Association TIRADS (EU-TIRADS)
5. Secondary Imaging Methods
5.1. Thyroid Scintigraphy: Nuclear Imaging Study of the Thyroid
5.2. Thyroid Computed Tomography (CT)
6. FNAB
Post-FNAB Management of Thyroid Nodules
7. Advancements in Cytologic Analysis
Molecular Testing
8. Artificial Intelligence (AI) Systems
9. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
FNAB | Fine-needle aspiration biopsy |
TSH | Thyroid-stimulating hormone |
Incidentalomas | Nodules incidentally found on high-resolution ultrasonography |
PTC | Papillary thyroid carcinoma |
T4 | Thyroxine |
T3 | Triiodothyronine |
anti-TPO | Antibody antithyroid peroxidase |
anti-Tg | Antibody antithyroglobulin |
US | Ultrasound |
CDUS | Color Doppler US |
CEUS | Contrast-enhanced US |
ACR | American College of Radiology |
TI-RADS | Thyroid Imaging Reporting and Data System |
K-TIRADS | Korean Society of Thyroid Radiology Thyroid Imaging, Reporting and Data System |
EU-TIRADS | European Thyroid Association TIRADS |
ATA | American Thyroid Association |
FNA | Fine-needle aspiration |
CT | Computed tomography |
AI | Artificial intelligence |
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David, E.; Grazhdani, H.; Tattaresu, G.; Pittari, A.; Foti, P.V.; Palmucci, S.; Spatola, C.; Lo Greco, M.C.; Inì, C.; Tiralongo, F.; et al. Thyroid Nodule Characterization: Overview and State of the Art of Diagnosis with Recent Developments, from Imaging to Molecular Diagnosis and Artificial Intelligence. Biomedicines 2024, 12, 1676. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines12081676
David E, Grazhdani H, Tattaresu G, Pittari A, Foti PV, Palmucci S, Spatola C, Lo Greco MC, Inì C, Tiralongo F, et al. Thyroid Nodule Characterization: Overview and State of the Art of Diagnosis with Recent Developments, from Imaging to Molecular Diagnosis and Artificial Intelligence. Biomedicines. 2024; 12(8):1676. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines12081676
Chicago/Turabian StyleDavid, Emanuele, Hektor Grazhdani, Giuliana Tattaresu, Alessandra Pittari, Pietro Valerio Foti, Stefano Palmucci, Corrado Spatola, Maria Chiara Lo Greco, Corrado Inì, Francesco Tiralongo, and et al. 2024. "Thyroid Nodule Characterization: Overview and State of the Art of Diagnosis with Recent Developments, from Imaging to Molecular Diagnosis and Artificial Intelligence" Biomedicines 12, no. 8: 1676. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines12081676
APA StyleDavid, E., Grazhdani, H., Tattaresu, G., Pittari, A., Foti, P. V., Palmucci, S., Spatola, C., Lo Greco, M. C., Inì, C., Tiralongo, F., Castiglione, D., Mastroeni, G., Gigli, S., & Basile, A. (2024). Thyroid Nodule Characterization: Overview and State of the Art of Diagnosis with Recent Developments, from Imaging to Molecular Diagnosis and Artificial Intelligence. Biomedicines, 12(8), 1676. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines12081676