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Parivash Parvasi, Zahra Fazelinejad, Fatemeh Mahdipour, Shahram Bagheri , Mohammad Momen Gharibvand ,
Volume 80, Issue 7 (October 2022)
Abstract

Background: Shear wave elastography (SWE) estimates the stiffness of a mass based on the velocity of shear wave propagation by sound waves. Due to higher cell density and angiogenesis, malignant masses have higher stiffness than benign ones.
Methods: The present study was a prospective study and was performed on patients who were referred to Ahvaz Golestan Hospital with breast mass during March 2020 to March 2021. Only patients with 4-5 BI-RAD were evaluated. Patients were graded based on ACR BI-RAD. All patients were subjected to ultrasound and selection of BI-RAD 4-5 patients for evaluation with SWE and sampling for pathology testing. In this study, in order to increase the maximum accuracy and take samples from the main location of the lesion, sampling was done by ultrasound-guided biopsy method. Tumor information was recorded by a specialist doctor after ultrasound and SWE. This information included tumor type, tumor size and grade, presence of metastasis, involvement of lymph nodes, average and maximum elasticity. SWE cutoffs were compared for mean and maximum elasticity to distinguish benign from malignant masses.
Results: In this study, 115 patients were evaluated. 63.5% (73) of the patients had benign mass and 36.5% (42) had malignant ones. There was a significant relationship between tumor size and mean and maximum elasticity (P<0.001 The results showed that the diagnostic accuracy of SWE in identifying malignant masses compared to benign ones was 100%, so that the mean (16.61±8.03 kPa) and maximum (21.14±8.88 kPa) elasticity in benign masses were significantly lower than the mean (32.21±7.59 kPa) and maximum (91.62±8.84 kPa) elasticity of malignant masses (P<0.001). There was also a significant difference between the 4 BI-RAD subgroups, so that in BI-RAD 4a, the lowest mean and maximum elasticity were seen (P<0.001).
Conclusion: The results showed that SWE parameters have sufficient diagnostic accuracy in diagnosing malignant breast masses. Therefore, the use of quantitative SWE parameters in conjunction with ultrasound and BI-RADS classification can avoid unnecessary biopsies.

Azim Motamedfar , Mohammad Momen Gharibvand, Mohammadghasem Hanafi , Fatemeh Neghab,
Volume 81, Issue 5 (August 2023)
Abstract

Background: The aim of the present study is to determine the accuracy of ultrasound imaging in the diagnosis of metastatic lymph nodes compared to postoperative pathology samples of patients with papillary thyroid cancer.
Methods: This study was carried out using a descriptive and analytical epidemiological method on 103 known patients with papillary thyroid cancer who referred to Imam and Golestan hospitals in Ahvaz for neck ultrasound from September 2021 to August 2022. A total of 103 patients (including 94 women (91.3%) and 9 men (8.7%)) with papillary thyroid cancer with an average age of (39.8±11.9) were included in the study. The average tumor size in these patients was estimated to be (16.8±10mm). The ultrasound results of these patients before surgery were compared with the pathology results of these patients after surgery.
Results: According to the obtained results, metastatic involvement of cervical lymph nodes was diagnosed in 36.6% of patients (38 people). Of these, 30.7% of patients (32 people) were real positive. The results of ultrasound before surgery were shown as false positive in 9.5% of patients (6 people). Lymphatic metastasis was not seen in 58.4% of patients (60 people) before surgery, which was consistent with the pathology result after surgery (true negative). The positive predictive value of examining metastatic lymph nodes by ultrasound was estimated at 84.2% and the negative predictive value at 92.3%. The diagnostic accuracy of ultrasound was 89%, the sensitivity rate was 86%, and the specificity rate was 90% with the area under the curve AUC=0.884 and P<0.001. Ultrasound accuracy is not affected by tumor size, Hashimoto's thyroiditis and metastasis location (P<0.05). In patients with Hashimoto's thyroiditis, the tumor size increases significantly more than 10 mm.
Conclusion: Ultrasound alone has an acceptable diagnostic accuracy in detecting metastatic lymph nodes caused by papillary thyroid cancer. However, the incidence of false negative error increases as the tumor size decreases.


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