Thyroid Incidentalomas: Scrutinizing the Mode of Detection and Evaluating its Contribution to Thyroid Cancer Diagnosis

Indian J Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2024 Apr;76(2):1733-1740. doi: 10.1007/s12070-023-04392-y. Epub 2023 Nov 28.

Abstract

There is an ongoing debate about the reasons behind the increasing incidence of thyroid cancer in the last two to three decades. Here, we investigate how thyroid nodules were detected in a large series of consultations for thyroid nodular pathology.

Methods: In total, 576 patients were analyzed, with a total of 1014 nodules described.

Results: In 347 (60.2%) cases, the diagnosis of a thyroid nodule was incidental, mostly during imaging tests for other reasons. Incidental diagnosis occurred among all ranges of nodule diameter and between palpable and non-palpable cases, even within a small proportion of symptomatic cases. In univariate analysis, incidental diagnosis was associated with smaller nodule diameter, non-palpable nodules, asymptomatic cases, older patient age, less advanced stages (T1-2), and conservative management. After multivariate analysis, older age, euthyroidism, and smaller diameter were statistically significant. Incidental diagnosis contributed to the diagnosis of 53.8% of the cases of cancer. Advanced T stages (T3-4) were more common in non-incidental diagnoses.

Conclusion: Our results indicate that incidental diagnosis of thyroid nodules is a significant contributor to thyroid cancer diagnosis in all ranges of nodule diameter, especially at earlier stages.

Keywords: Incidence; Incidental Findings; Thyroid Neoplasms; Thyroid Nodule; Thyroid cancer, Papillary..