Abstract

Thyroid diseases can affect various bodily functions and often go unnoticed. Tools such as sonography and fine needle aspiration (FNA) puncture are necessary to diagnose diseases that require surgical intervention. These tools help identify signs of malignancy or benignity and obtain further data to guide therapeutic decisions. This study aims to validate the relationship between sonographic results, FNA, and final thyroid pathology. This research describes the level of correlation between sonographic findings and FNA, the sonographic and final pathology reports, and the FNA and final pathology reports. Additionally, this research aims to identify the most common diagnoses in the final pathology. A retrospective descriptive observational study was carried out with a sample of 95 patients who underwent thyroid surgery at the National Institute of Diabetes, Endocrinology, and Nutrition (INDEN), Dominican Republic, in 2019 to determine whether a relationship exists between the sonography findings, FNA, and the final pathology in surgical thyroid pathologies. A total of 95 patients were studied. The success rate of the sonography results compared with the benign final biopsy result was 100% and 45.9% with the malignant final biopsy result. The success rate of the fine needle biopsy results was 95.9% for the benign final biopsy and 28% for the malignant final biopsy. Of the malignant final biopsy reports, 84.6% were papillary carcinomas, 7.7% were follicular carcinomas, and 7.7% were medullary carcinomas. The relationship between the sonographic results, FNA, and histopathological findings of surgical thyroid diseases is validated. The sonographic findings are specific for diagnosing benignity and malignancy. A fine needle biopsy is useful for diagnosing benignity, and the final biopsy is the standard for confirming both benign and malignant pathologies.

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