Past
In the past decades, fine-needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) was the primary option for the diagnosis of suspicious lymph nodes on ultrasound in differentiated thyroid cancers (DTC). However, false-negative (6–18%) and non-diagnostic (up to 20%) results are common, resulting in high rates of misdiagnosis1.
To improve the diagnostic performance of FNAC, measurement of thyroglobulin (Tg) concentration in the washout fluid of the needle used in FNAC (FNA-Tg) was introduced by Pacini et al. in 19922. FNA-Tg was proved to have high accuracy for detection of nodal metastases from DTC, especially in patients previously treated by thyroidectomy. However, due to the lack of standardization of the sample preparing and assessing procedures, the cutoff value for diagnosis is still under debate. Moreover, the influence of serum Tg and thyroidectomy status on the performance of FNA-Tg is unclear.
Present
This study highlighted the efficacy of FNA-Tg for detecting lateral neck lymph node metastasis in preoperative papillary thyroid cancer patients3. The superior sensitivity and excellent negative predictive values support its routine use as guidance for lateral neck dissection. Because the level of FNA-Tg in the central compartment was easier to be by affected blood contamination or Tg leakage than that in the lateral compartment4,5, the additional diagnostic value of FNA-Tg is limited in central neck dissection planning. It is of note that, as compared to the absolute value, no diagnostic advantage was found for the difference or ratio between FNA-Tg and serum Tg.
A standardized FNA-Tg sample preparing procedure was introduced in this study3, a fixed 5 µL of aspiration was added to 195 µL of Tg-free serum3. This could be a potential standard operating procedure with a fixed volume of aspiration sample and diluent matrix, thereby enabling comparisons among studies. Future multicenter data for a large-scale trial could provide robust evidence of diagnostic accuracy to the standard operating procedure of FNA-Tg.
Future
FNA-Tg alone could accurately diagnose lateral lymph node metastasis in this study3. This might be a convenient and inexpensive choice in the following clinical application. Whereas an algorithm may be useful for future central lymph node diagnosis, including FNA-Tg, FNAC, and intraoperative frozen pathology.
Acknowledgements
This study was supported by Major new medical technology in the First Affiliated Hospital of Xian Jiaotong University (XJYFY-2019ZD10), the Key Point Research Project of Shaanxi Province (No. 2019SF-078, No. 2017SF-258), and the National Science Foundation of China (No. 81871389).
Disclosure
All authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.
Footnotes
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