Thyroid lobectomy (TL) in patients with thyroid nodule (TN) Bethesda III (BIII) and IV (BIV) purports a totalization when pathology informs of high risk malignancy (HRM: Cell high risk phenotype and/or widely invasive-angioinvasive thyroid carcinoma). Studies on predictive variables correlating with HRM are lacking.
Data on demographics, TIRADS, Bethesda, size of TN, extension of thyroidectomy of patients operated on for BIII and BIV TN have been retrieved from a prospective database and compared between low risk (LR: Benign, low risk neoplasm and malignancy, minimally invasive/non angioinvasive) and HRM groups. A predictive model has been constructed and sensitivity (SE), specificity (SP), positive (PPV) and negative predictive value (NPV) and area under curve (AUC), have been calculated. Quantitative data are summarized as a mean ± SD and analysis of qualitative variables have done with X2 test.
One-hundred eight patients with a mean age of 53±25 years, 70,4% females and 70,4 and 29,6% of BIII and BIV were assessed. TL and TT were performed in 62 and 38%. Thyroid malignancy has been reported in 28,9 and 56,3 in BIII and BIV. TN >4 cm and TIRADS 4-5 have been correlated with final HRM pathology (p=0,004 and p=0,003). Elicited significant variables predicted model construct showed a SE, SP, PPV, NPV and AUC of de 0,45, 0,94, 0,72, 0,82 and 0,77, respectively.
The predictive model construct to detect patients at risk for HRM thyroid nodules, may be useful in the shared decision of the extension of thyroid surgery.