Can ultrasound elastography distinguish metastatic from reactive lymph nodes in patients with primary head and neck cancers

2014 
Abstract Objectives The purpose of this study was to evaluate the diagnostic utility of real-time elastography (RTE) in differentiating between reactive and metastatic cervical lymph nodes (LN) in patients with primary head and neck cancer in comparison with the conventional B mode and power Doppler parameters. Methods A total of 127 lymph nodes in 78 patients with primary head and neck cancer were examined by B-mode sonography, power Doppler ultrasound and elastography. Elastographic patterns were determined on the distribution and percentage of the lymph node area with low elasticity (hard), with pattern 1 being an absent or very small hard area to pattern 5, a hard area occupying the entire lymph node. Patterns 3–5 were considered metastatic. Ultrasound guided aspiration cytology was done for 57 lymph nodes. Excision biopsy was done for 52 lymph nodes. Eighteen lymph nodes responded to conservative treatment, and were considered reactive. Results The majority (85.3%) of the metastatic lymph nodes had elastography pattern 3–5. This finding was observed in only 5% of the benign lymph nodes ( P Conclusions The accuracy of sonoelastography is higher than usual B mode and power Doppler ultrasound parameters in differentiation between benign and malignant nodes. The integration of lymph node sonoelastography in the follow up of patients with known head and neck cancer may reduce the number of biopsies.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    35
    References
    10
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []