Abstract

Neck swellings are frequently found and can present the vast pathological spectrum from simple benign to highly malignant, which sometimes can pose a diagnostic dilemma. They are broadly classified as developmental, inflammatory, and neoplastic on the basis of etiology. The aim of the study is to assess the distribution of neck swelling according to etiology and its relation to age groups, as well as to assess their clinicopathological correlation as benign and malignant. The study was conducted from January 2020 to February 2023 on the basis of retrospective and prospective sampling. All the patients with neck swellings, except thyroid, who had undergone an excisional or incisional biopsy, were included in this study. Data was collected from in-patient records for retrospective sampling, and fine-needle aspiration cytology (FNAC), radiological investigation, and excisional or incisional biopsy were performed for prospective sampling after proper history and examination. Cytological and pathological correlation was analyzed as benign and malignant. Sensitivity and specificity were calculated. (P value <0.001 considered significant). Out of the 74 patients, 16% were categorized as developmental, 31% as inflammatory, and 53% as neoplastic (benign 64%, malignant 36%). The most common cause was an epidermoid cyst (50%) among developmental swellings, reactive lymphadenitis (48%), and tuberculosis (35%) among inflammatory, pleomorphic adenoma among benign neoplasm and metastasis to lymph node among malignant swelling. Malignant lesions mainly occur in the older age group, more than 40 years of age. The overall sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of FNAC, to differentiate from benign to malignant, is very similar to histopathological examination. Different age groups breed different etiology, so age needs to be the prime demographic factor to be established. Pediatric and younger generations of neck swelling are usually inflammatory and developmental, in contrast to the older category, in which malignancy is far more prevalent, hence demanding more caution in evaluation. FNAC is a diagnostic tool that has become highly sensitive for malignant lesions; though in no sense can it replace histopathology, it can still be valuable in diagnostic and screening dilemmas of neck swelling.

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