Using a CT-based scale to evaluate disease extension and the resectability of locally advanced thyroid cancer.
1/5 보강
PICO 자동 추출 (휴리스틱, conf 2/4)
유사 논문P · Population 대상 환자/모집단
31 patients from the 2 centre as the testing cohort, who were categorised into the resectable and unresectable groups.
I · Intervention 중재 / 시술
추출되지 않음
C · Comparison 대조 / 비교
추출되지 않음
O · Outcome 결과 / 결론
[KEY POINTS] • The researchers built a 12-score CT scale (including recurrent laryngeal nerve, trachea, oesophagus, artery, vein, and soft tissue) to evaluate the resectability of locally advanced thyroid cancer. • This scale has the potential to help clinicians make treatment plans for locally advanced thyroid cancer.
[OBJECTIVES] To establish a computed tomography (CT)-based scale to evaluate the resectability of locally advanced thyroid cancer.
- p-value p < 0.001
- p-value p = 0.001
- 95% CI 0.812-0.952
APA
Huang NS, Li Q, et al. (2023). Using a CT-based scale to evaluate disease extension and the resectability of locally advanced thyroid cancer.. European radiology, 33(12), 9063-9073. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00330-023-09799-3
MLA
Huang NS, et al.. "Using a CT-based scale to evaluate disease extension and the resectability of locally advanced thyroid cancer.." European radiology, vol. 33, no. 12, 2023, pp. 9063-9073.
PMID
37439940
Abstract
[OBJECTIVES] To establish a computed tomography (CT)-based scale to evaluate the resectability of locally advanced thyroid cancer.
[METHODS] This twin-centre retrospective study included 95 locally advanced thyroid cancer patients from the 1 centre as the training cohort and 31 patients from the 2 centre as the testing cohort, who were categorised into the resectable and unresectable groups. Three radiologists scored the CT scans of each patient by evaluating the extension to the recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN), trachea, oesophagus, artery, vein, soft tissue, and larynx. A 14-score scale (including all comprised structures) and a 12-score scale (excluding larynx) were developed. Receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) analysis was used to evaluate the performance of the scales. Stratified fivefold cross-validation and external verification were used to validate the scale.
[RESULTS] In the training cohort, compromised RLN (p < 0.001), trachea (p = 0.001), oesophagus (p = 0.002), artery (p < 0.001), vein (p = 0.005), and soft tissue (p < 0.001) were predictors for unresectability, while compromised larynx (p = 0.283) was not. The 12-score scale (AUC = 0.882, 95%CI: 0.812-0.952) was not inferior to the 14-score scale (AUC = 0.891, 95%CI: 0.823-0.960). In subgroup analysis, the AUCs of the 12-score scale were 0.826 for treatment-naïve patients and 0.976 for patients with prior surgery. The 12-score scale was further validated with a fivefold cross-validation analysis, with an overall accuracy of 78.9-89.4%. Finally, external validation using the testing cohort showed an AUC of 0.875.
[CONCLUSIONS] The researchers built a CT-based 12-score scale to evaluate the resectability of locally advanced thyroid cancer. Validation with a larger sample size is required to confirm the efficacy of the scale.
[CLINICAL RELEVANCE STATEMENT] This 12-score CT scale would help clinicians evaluate the resectability of locally advanced thyroid cancer.
[KEY POINTS] • The researchers built a 12-score CT scale (including recurrent laryngeal nerve, trachea, oesophagus, artery, vein, and soft tissue) to evaluate the resectability of locally advanced thyroid cancer. • This scale has the potential to help clinicians make treatment plans for locally advanced thyroid cancer.
[METHODS] This twin-centre retrospective study included 95 locally advanced thyroid cancer patients from the 1 centre as the training cohort and 31 patients from the 2 centre as the testing cohort, who were categorised into the resectable and unresectable groups. Three radiologists scored the CT scans of each patient by evaluating the extension to the recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN), trachea, oesophagus, artery, vein, soft tissue, and larynx. A 14-score scale (including all comprised structures) and a 12-score scale (excluding larynx) were developed. Receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) analysis was used to evaluate the performance of the scales. Stratified fivefold cross-validation and external verification were used to validate the scale.
[RESULTS] In the training cohort, compromised RLN (p < 0.001), trachea (p = 0.001), oesophagus (p = 0.002), artery (p < 0.001), vein (p = 0.005), and soft tissue (p < 0.001) were predictors for unresectability, while compromised larynx (p = 0.283) was not. The 12-score scale (AUC = 0.882, 95%CI: 0.812-0.952) was not inferior to the 14-score scale (AUC = 0.891, 95%CI: 0.823-0.960). In subgroup analysis, the AUCs of the 12-score scale were 0.826 for treatment-naïve patients and 0.976 for patients with prior surgery. The 12-score scale was further validated with a fivefold cross-validation analysis, with an overall accuracy of 78.9-89.4%. Finally, external validation using the testing cohort showed an AUC of 0.875.
[CONCLUSIONS] The researchers built a CT-based 12-score scale to evaluate the resectability of locally advanced thyroid cancer. Validation with a larger sample size is required to confirm the efficacy of the scale.
[CLINICAL RELEVANCE STATEMENT] This 12-score CT scale would help clinicians evaluate the resectability of locally advanced thyroid cancer.
[KEY POINTS] • The researchers built a 12-score CT scale (including recurrent laryngeal nerve, trachea, oesophagus, artery, vein, and soft tissue) to evaluate the resectability of locally advanced thyroid cancer. • This scale has the potential to help clinicians make treatment plans for locally advanced thyroid cancer.
MeSH Terms
Humans; Retrospective Studies; Larynx; Tomography, X-Ray Computed; Thyroid Neoplasms
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