Abstract

The role of intraoperative frozen section in certain organ systems such as the thyroid continues to be problematic. In many cases, diagnoses are deferred or nonhelpful--"follicular lesion." In the modern era, the widespread use of preoperative aspiration biopsy has allowed for more careful selection of patients who undergo thyroid surgery. In many cases, the fine-needle-aspiration (FNA) biopsy diagnosis can be definitive or can guide the specific surgical procedure. The literature supports our approach, which is summarized as follows: Intraoperative consultation is not needed on the intrathyroidal nodule if a preoperative FNA was definitive for papillary carcinoma. Frozen section is of no value in the intraoperative diagnosis of lesions diagnosed on FNA as "follicular neoplasm" or "Hürthle cell neoplasm" because the characterization of these lesions requires detailed analysis of the tumor capsule for the demonstration of capsular and/or vascular invasion--an analysis that is not practical in the intraoperative setting. Finally, intraoperative consultation including frozen section and intraoperative cytologic examination is most useful in those cases that are diagnosed as suspicious for papillary carcinoma by FNA, because the assessment of nuclear features needed for the definitive diagnosis is possible with intraoperative techniques in a significant number of cases.

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