CHICAGO — Routine concurrent sonographic breast and thyroid examinations are useful in detecting small thyroid cancers in women, Dr. Jeong Seon Park said at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America.
The two tests were combined in a prospective study of 5,549 women conducted between January 2003 and March 2004.
The findings were so convincing that thyroid testing is now routine practice when a breast ultrasound is ordered at the Korean Cancer Center in Koyang, where the study was conducted.
Breast ultrasounds are added to mammography for women with dense breasts, and detect additional cancers in about 1 in 1,000 cases, she said.
All participants, aged 13-83 years, underwent breast and thyroid screening sonography (4,864 women) or sonography for diagnosis or follow-up of breast cancer (685 women).
Ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration was performed when a thyroid lesion was suspicious for malignancy based on hypoechogenicity, irregular shape, or poorly defined margins.
A total of 42 (0.75%) cases of thyroid cancer were detected and confirmed pathologically. All were papillary carcinomas.
There were 13 (1.9%) thyroid cancers among the patients with breast cancer, compared with 29 (0.6%) thyroid cancers among patients with negative or benign breast disease.
In the breast cancer group, 6 of the 13 cases were detected as having concurrent breast and thyroid cancers; the remaining 7 thyroid cancers were diagnosed after 6-14 months of follow-up.
Patrice Wendling