Abstract
Thyroid nodules suspicious for malignancy during clinical-ultrasound (US) evaluation undergo fine-needle-aspiration biopsy (FNAB) followed by cytological evaluation and, in indeterminate cases, an additional surgical intervention or molecular testing is recommended. Quantitative ultrasound (QUS) was investigated as a non-invasive approach to detect thyroid cancer and potentially reduce the currently large number of unnecessary FNABs. RF data were acquired from 225 nodules of 208 patients using a GE Logiq E9 US equipped with a 10-MHz linear-array probe. Five QUS estimates were computed throughout each nodule. Specifically, effective scatter diameter, effective scatter concentration, midband fit, and intercept were obtained using a reference-phantom method. The Nakagami shape parameter was computed using a maximum-likelihood estimator. Mean and standard deviations (SD) of QUS estimates within nodules were used for classification. QUS-based classification performance was quantified using area-under-the-curve (AUC) values obtained from receiver-operating- characteristic analyses. An AUC value of 0.77 was obtained using the SD of intercept alone; the value increased to 0.86 when five QUS estimates were linearly combined. Our in vivo results demonstrate the potential of QUS methods to detect cancerous nodules. Ultimately, the clinical protocol could be altered to prevent FNABs of nodules highly unlikely to be malignant based on QUS analysis.
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