Combining molecular testing and the Bethesda category III:VI ratio for thyroid fine‐needle aspirates: A quality‐assurance metric for evaluating diagnostic performance in a cytopathology laboratory

Background Molecular testing (MT) of thyroid fine‐needle aspiration (FNA)‐derived genetic material is commonly used to assess malignancy risk for indeterminate cases. The Bethesda System for Reporting Thyroid Cytopathology (TBS) provides limited guidance for the appropriate use of category III (atyp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancer cytopathology 2022-04, Vol.130 (4), p.259-274
Hauptverfasser: Gokozan, Hamza N., Dilcher, Thomas L., Alperstein, Susan A., Qiu, Yuqing, Mostyka, Maria, Scognamiglio, Theresa, Solomon, James P., Song, Wei, Rennert, Hanna, Beg, Shaham, Stern, Evan, Goyal, Abha, Siddiqui, Momin T., Heymann, Jonas J.
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Zusammenfassung:Background Molecular testing (MT) of thyroid fine‐needle aspiration (FNA)‐derived genetic material is commonly used to assess malignancy risk for indeterminate cases. The Bethesda System for Reporting Thyroid Cytopathology (TBS) provides limited guidance for the appropriate use of category III (atypia of undetermined significance [AUS]). The authors combined MT with cytomorphology to monitor AUS diagnoses in a cytopathology laboratory. Methods Neoplasia‐associated genetic alterations (NGAs) were determined by MT of preoperative FNA biopsies or resected malignancies and were categorized as BRAF V600E mutations, RAS‐like mutations (HRAS, NRAS, or KRAS mutations or non‐V600E BRAF mutations), or other mutations. Results Among 7382 thyroid FNA biopsies, the AUS rate was 9.3% overall and ranged from 4.3% to 24.2% among 6 cytopathologists (CPs) who evaluated >150 cases. The ratio of specimens falling into TBS category III to specimens falling into category VI (malignant) (the III:VI ratio) was 2.4 overall (range, 1.1‐8.1), and the ratio of specimens falling into TBS categories III and IV (follicular neoplasm or suspicious for follicular neoplasm) combined (III+IV) to specimens falling into category VI (the [III+IV]:VI ratio) was 2.9 overall (range, 1.4‐9.5). MT was performed on 588 cases from 560 patients (79% women) with a median age of 56 years (range, 8‐89 years). BRAF V600E mutation was the most common (76% of cases) in TBS category VI and was rare (3%) in category III. RAS‐like mutations were most common in TBS categories III (13%), IV (25%), and V (suspicious for malignancy) (17.5%). The NGA rate in AUS cases fell between 5% and 20% for 5 of 6 CPs and did not correlate with the III:VI ratio or the (III+IV):VI ratio. Conclusions Lack of correlation between the NGA rate and easily calculable diagnostic ratios enables the calibration of diagnostic thresholds, even for CPs who have normal metrics. Specifically, calculation of the NGA rate and the III:VI ratio may allow individual CPs to determine whether they are overcalling or undercalling cases that other CPs might otherwise recategorize. Combined calculation of the rate of neoplasia‐associated genetic alterations among atypia of undetermined significance specimens with the atypia of undetermined significance‐to‐malignant ratio (category III:VI ratio) according to The Bethesda System for Reporting Thyroid Cytopathology improves calibration of the diagnostic thyroid fine‐needle aspiration threshold for cytopat
ISSN:1934-662X
1934-6638
DOI:10.1002/cncy.22542