Abstract

OBJECTIVE. The purpose of our study was to determine the CT features of benign intrapulmonary lymph nodes in pediatric patients with known extrapulmonary solid malignancy. MATERIALS AND METHODS. A retrospective review of surgical pathology archives was performed to identify consecutive chest CT studies of pediatric patients (≤ 18 years) with extrapulmonary solid malignancy and histologically confirmed benign intrapulmonary lymph nodes between January 1, 2004, and March 15, 2020. CT features of intrapulmonary lymph nodes-including size, shape, margin, type, associated calcification or fat, and location-were independently evaluated by two pediatric radiologist reviewers. The CT features of benign intrapulmonary lymph nodes in pediatric patients were analyzed using summary statistics. Interobserver agreement was measured with the kappa coefficient. RESULTS. There were 36 pathology-confirmed benign intrapulmonary lymph nodes in 27 pediatric patients (18 boys and nine girls; mean age, 12 years; age range, 1-18.2 years). Twenty-three (63.9%) of the benign intrapulmonary lymph nodes were biopsied from the right lung and 13 (36.1%) from the left lung (p = .03). The mean size, determined from CT studies, of benign intrapulmonary lymph nodes was 3.6 mm (SD, 1.4 mm; range, 1.3-7.8 mm). Triangular shape (25/36, 69.4%) was the most common shape of the benign intrapulmonary lymph nodes. Less commonly seen shapes of benign intrapulmonary lymph nodes were oval (6/36, 16.7%), round (3/36, 8.3%), and trapezoidal (2/36, 5.6%). All benign intrapulmonary lymph nodes were smoothly marginated and solid without associated calcification or fat. Of the 36 benign intrapulmonary lymph nodes, 15 (41.7%) were pleura-based; 11 (30.6%), perifissural; and 10 (27.8%), parenchymal. The kappa value for interobserver agreement between the two reviewers was 0.917 (95% CI, 0.825-1.000; standard error, 0.047), which corresponds to near-perfect agreement. CONCLUSION. In pediatric patients with known extrapulmonary solid malignancy, benign intrapulmonary lymph nodes are subcentimeter (mean size, 3.6 mm), smoothly marginated, and solid without containing calcification or fat on CT. In particular, triangular shape was the most commonly encountered shape of a benign intrapulmonary lymph node.

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