Abstract

OBJECTIVE:Imaging diagnosis of cervical lymphadenopathy has conventionally used ultrasonography. Shear wave elastography (SWE) is a recent ultrasound technological advancement that has shown promise in the important medical problem of differentiating between benign and malignant cervical lymph nodes based on quantitative measurements of elasticity modulus. However, widely varying elasticity modulus metrics and regions-of-interest (ROIs) were used in existing studies, leading to inconsistent findings and results that are hard to compare with each other.METHODS:Using a large dataset of 264 cervical lymph nodes from 200 patients, we designed a study comparing three elasticity modulus metrics (Emax, Emean, and standard deviation-SD) with three different ROIs to evaluate the effect of such selections. The metric values were compared between the benign and malignant node groups. The different ROI and metric selections were also compared through receiver operating characteristics curve analysis.RESULTS:For all ROIs, all metric values were significantly different between the two groups, indicting their diagnostic potential. This was confirmed by the ≥0.80 area under the curve (AUC) values achieved with these metrics. Different ROIs had no effect on Emax, whereas all ROIs achieved high performance at 0.88 AUC. For Emean, the smallest ROI focusing on the area of the highest elasticity achieved the best diagnostic performance. In contrast, the larger ROIs achieved higher performances for SD.CONCLUSIONS:This study illustrated the effect of elasticity modulus and ROI selection on the diagnostic performance of SWE on cervical lymphadenopathy. These new findings help guide relevant future studies and clinical applications of this important quantitative imaging modality.

Highlights

  • Cervical lymphadenopathy is a common clinical finding, and can result from various conditions such as infection, inflammation, and malignancy [1]

  • Three different ROIs were defined for two example cases as illustrated in Figure 1, in which 1A shows the Shear wave elastography (SWE) in color overlay and 1B shows the B-mode US only for a malignant lymph nodes (LNs) from papillary thyroid cancer: ROI-1, a small circular ROI with a diameter of 2 mm placed around the stiffest region of the LN; ROI-2, a larger circular ROI tangential to the LN border and containing the stiffest region; and ROI-3, a manually drawn ROI encompassing the entire LN

  • A large portion of the malignant LNs were from papillary thyroid cancer

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Summary

Introduction

Cervical lymphadenopathy is a common clinical finding, and can result from various conditions such as infection, inflammation, and malignancy [1]. Differential diagnosis among these conditions is essential for deciding the subsequent medical management. Differentiating between benign and malignant cervical lymph nodes (LNs) is especially important. Received for publication on July 14, 2020. Accepted for publication on July 22, 2020

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