Malignancy rate in thyroid nodules classified as bethesda category III (AUS/FLUS) Journal Article


Authors: Ho, A. S.; Sarti, E. E.; Jain, K. S.; Wang, H.; Nixon, I. J.; Shaha, A. R.; Shah, J. P.; Kraus, D. H.; Ghossein, R.; Fish, S. A.; Wong, R. J.; Lin, O.; Morris, L. G. T.
Article Title: Malignancy rate in thyroid nodules classified as bethesda category III (AUS/FLUS)
Abstract: Background: The Bethesda System for Reporting Thyroid Cytopathology is the standard for interpreting fine needle aspiration (FNA) specimens. The "atypia of undetermined significance/follicular lesion of undetermined significance" (AUS/FLUS) category, known as Bethesda Category III, has been ascribed a malignancy risk of 5-15%, but the probability of malignancy in AUS/FLUS specimens remains unclear. Our objective was to determine the risk of malignancy in thyroid FNAs categorized as AUS/FLUS at a comprehensive cancer center. Methods: The management of 541 AUS/FLUS thyroid nodule patients treated at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center between 2008 and 2011 was analyzed. Clinical and radiologic features were examined as predictors for surgery. Target AUS/FLUS nodules were correlated with surgical pathology. Results: Of patients with an FNA initially categorized as AUS/FLUS, 64.7% (350/541) underwent immediate surgery, 17.7% (96/541) had repeat FNA, and 17.6% (95/541) were observed. Repeat FNA cytology was unsatisfactory in 5.2% (5/96), benign in 42.7% (41/96), AUS/FLUS in 38.5% (37/96), suspicious for follicular neoplasm in 5.2% (5/96), suspicious for malignancy in 4.2% (4/96), and malignant in 4.2% (4/96). Of nodules with two consecutive AUS/FLUS diagnoses that were resected, 26.3% (5/19) were malignant. Among all index AUS/FLUS nodules (triaged to surgery, repeat FNA, or observation), malignancy was confirmed on surgical pathology in 26.6% [CI 22.4-31.3]. Among AUS/FLUS nodules triaged to surgery, the malignancy rate was 37.8% [CI 33.1-42.8]. Incidental cancers were found in 22.3% of patients. On univariate logistic regression analysis, factors associated with triage to surgery were younger patient age (p<0.0001), increasing nodule size (p<0.0001), and nodule hypervascularity (p=0.032). Conclusions: In patients presenting to a comprehensive cancer center, malignancy rates in nodules with AUS/FLUS cytology are higher than previously estimated, with 26.6-37.8% of AUS/FLUS nodules harboring cancer. These data imply that Bethesda Category III nodules in some practice settings may have a higher risk of malignancy than traditionally believed, and that guidelines recommending repeat FNA or observation merit reconsideration. © Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
Keywords: adult; human tissue; major clinical study; clinical feature; cancer patient; cytology; probability; thyroid cancer; cancer classification; thyroid nodule; emergency health service; named inventories, questionnaires and rating scales; fine needle aspiration biopsy; human; male; female; priority journal; article; bethesda system for reporting thyroid cytopathology
Journal Title: Thyroid
Volume: 24
Issue: 5
ISSN: 1050-7256
Publisher: Mary Ann Liebert, Inc  
Date Published: 2014-05-19
Start Page: 832
End Page: 839
Language: English
DOI: 10.1089/thy.2013.0317
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 24341462
PMCID: PMC4948206
DOI/URL:
Notes: Thyroid -- Cited By (since 1996):1 -- Export Date: 8 July 2014 -- CODEN: THYRE -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Ronald A Ghossein
    477 Ghossein
  2. Ashok R Shaha
    692 Shaha
  3. Oscar Lin
    303 Lin
  4. Hangjun Wang
    12 Wang
  5. Iain James Nixon
    60 Nixon
  6. Richard J Wong
    406 Wong
  7. Luc Morris
    274 Morris
  8. Stephanie Anne Fish
    25 Fish
  9. Jatin P Shah
    716 Shah
  10. Allen Szu Hao Ho
    17 Ho
  11. Kunal Jain
    3 Jain