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Thyroid Volumetric Quantification
Author(s) -
Malago Roberto,
D'Onofrio Mirko,
Ferdeghini Marco,
Mantovani William,
Colato Chiara,
Brazzarola Paolo,
Motton Massimiliano,
Mucelli Roberto Pozzi
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
journal of ultrasound in medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.574
H-Index - 91
eISSN - 1550-9613
pISSN - 0278-4297
DOI - 10.7863/jum.2008.27.12.1727
Subject(s) - medicine , thyroid
Objective. Thyroid volume quantification is an important parameter for radiotherapy dosing in cases of major thyroid diseases such as thyroiditis and carcinoma. In clinical practice, this calculation is performed by means of ultrasonography on the basis of an ellipsoid formula obtained from the 3 axes. The aim of our study was to compare the accuracy of volume calculation between B‐mode ultrasonography and volumetric ultrasonography (VUS). Methods. Between April and May 2007, 27 consecutive patients selected for thyroidectomy were prospectively evaluated. One expert ultrasound operator calculated each thyroid volume with standard B‐mode ultrasonography on the basis of the 3 axes of each lobe, and then the patients were analyzed with an offline workstation equipped with volumetric probes (VUS). On the offline workstation, 2 separate blinded operators (VUS1 and VUS2) calculated the thyroid volume with virtual organ computer‐aided analysis. Data acquired were then compared with pathologic anatomy (PA). Results. The mean time for B‐mode analysis was 6 minutes, whereas VUS analysis needed a mean time of 16.5 minutes. Interobserver variability between the median VUS1 and VUS2 measurements was 0.36 mL (interquartile range [IQR], −0.79 to 0.37 mL; P < .156). The median variability between B‐mode ultrasonography and PA was −9.6 mL (IQR, −16.7 to 1.5 mL; P < .001), and that between VUS and PA was −2.87 mL (IQR, −11.97 to 9.51 mL; P = .019). The overall performance of B‐mode ultrasonography in comparison with PA was −29.1% (IQR, −47.5% to −5.9%), and that of VUS in comparison with PA was −6.3% (IQR, −26.3 to 13.7%; P < .001). Conclusions. Volumetric ultrasonography is a valid tool that compares better with PA than does B‐mode ultrasonography.