Clinicopathological Spectrum of Thyroid Swelling: A Single Institutional Prospective Study from Northeast India

Purpose: The pathologic lesions of the thyroid gland are manifested by varied morphologies. The current study aims to report the clinicopathologic features of patients with thyroid swelling from a tertiary centre of North-East India with particular emphasis on histopathological examination (HPE). Method: It is a prospective hospital-based study. Fifty-three resected specimens of thyroid surgery were included in the study. All the specimens were undertaken for HPE


Introduction
Thyroid lesions are common among the general population. Diseases of the thyroid include conditions associated with excessive release of thyroid hormones (hyperthyroidism), those associated with thyroid hormone deficiency (hypothyroidism), and neoplasms of the thyroid [1].
The pathologic lesions of the thyroid gland are manifested by varied morphologies. Despite many lesions, it is convenient to consider them as divided into two major types: those that show a diffuse pattern and those that produce nodules. Diffuse thyroid lesions are associated with conditions affecting the entire gland, such as hyperplasia and thyroiditis. The term thyroid nodule is referred to a clinically or radiologically discernable lesion within the thyroid gland [2]. Thyroid nodules are detected clinically in 4-7% in the general population and Michimi Daimary 1 , R N Choubey 2 , Jyotiman Nath 3 found incidentally on ultrasonography in 19 -67 %. The majority of thyroid nodules are asymptomatic, but 5% of all palpable thyroid nodules are malignant [3]. Although thyroid function tests, scintigraphy, and ultrasound were routinely used to diagnose thyroid nodules, they could not discriminate between benign and malignant lesions [4].
The frozen section has served well in the past in intraoperative diagnosis of thyroid cancer and determination of the extent of thyroidectomy. However, the emergence of increasingly accurate and cheap methods of pre-and intraoperative fine needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) has raised questions about the routine use of frozen sections as an intraoperative diagnostic tool [5][6][7]. Moreover, the refinement in imaging, combined with the preoperative availability of fine-needle aspiration cytology (FNAC), has enhanced the ability of surgeons to plan procedures more appropriately. Knowledge in the field of thyroid pathology has been snowballing in recent years. Immunohistochemically, many markers have been documented in normal thyroid follicular cells, most expressed in well-differentiated tumours. These markers have been evaluated in normal tissues, benign and malignant tumours, hoping to find significantly different values among these groups that could be explored diagnostically [8].
The current study was undertaken to assess the clinicopathologic features of patients with thyroid swelling from a tertiary centre of North-East India.

Materials and Methods
This prospective study was conducted in the department of Pathology in a tertiary health care centre of northeast India for one year. Total 53 thyroid resected specimens clinically presenting with thyroid swelling were included in the study. Preoperative FNAC followed by post-operative histopathology examination (HPE) and immunohistochemistry (IHC) for malignant tumours with TTF-1, Thyroglobulin and CK-7 were done per IHC protocol in the malignant thyroid cases.

Histopathological examination
Thyroid specimens received were fixed in 10% formalin, and detailed gross examination was done and recorded accordingly. The samples were then sectioned from representative areas, and tissue sections were prepared by appropriate processing and stained routinely by Hematoxylin and Eosin.

Immunohistochemistry
After section cutting, the selected paraffin embedded tissue blocks of malignant thyroid tumours were taken up on poly-lysine coated slides for the IHC procedure.
The positive controls used were sections of adenocarcinoma of the lung for CK7 and TTF-1 and sections of normal thyroid for thyroglobulin. The negative controls used were sections of the study tissues with no primary antibody incubation. All immunohistochemical markers were assessed under light microscopy. The scoring of immunostained slides was conducted according to the percentage of tumour cells exhibiting cytoplasmic staining for Thyroglobulin and CK7 and nuclear staining for TTF-1 [9]. The results were scored as 0 staining in less than 5% of tumour cells 1+ staining in 5% -30% of tumor cells 2+ staining in more than 30% of tumour cells

Statistical analysis
Baseline variables were depicted as number (percentage), mean ± SD and median. Statistical analysis was conducted with Microsoft Office Excel V. 2007.

Discussion
The present study attempts to report the clinicopathologic features of patients with thyroid swelling from a tertiary centre of North-East India. A total of 53 patients were included in the study, and the majority were female patients (84.90%). There is significant female swellings during the evaluation. In 43% of cases, it was reported as benign and only in 3 cases (5.66%) the malignancy was reported. Ten patients (18.86%) had unsatisfactory aspiration, and nine patients (16.98%) had the indeterminate neoplasia interpretation. Table 3 depicts the histopathological diagnosis of the 53 patients operated on for thyroid swellings. The majority of the cases (46 patients, 86.8%) were benign, the commonest being the colloid goitre (62.3%), followed by follicular adenoma (11.3%). Malignancy was found in seven cases (13.2%). Papillary carcinoma was the commonest malignancy accounting for 6 cases (11.3%). One case of Follicular carcinoma was diagnosed.
IHC with TTF-1, Thyroglobulin and CK-7 was done as per IHC protocol in the malignant thyroid cases.     females, respectively [10,11]. The majority of the patients (60.37%) in the current study were below 40. The age distribution is similar to many other published pieces of literatures. In a clinicopathological study of incidentally revealed thyroid swellings in Bihar, India, the highest incidence of thyroid swelling (75.84%) was found in the age group of 20-40 years; a female preponderance was noted in the ratio 4:1 [12]. Ninety per cent of the cases in the present had euthyroid status. Hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism were observed in 5.66 % and 3.7% of the cases, respectively. Similar results are reported by other published literature [13,14].
In the current study, the distribution of thyroid nodules is approximately similar in both lobes. The site of thyroid nodule in gland varied in reports of different study groups; most have found the right lobe to be affected more [15][16][17].
The swelling was the only symptom in most patients in our study (28 patients, 52.83%). Eleven patients (20.75%) gave a history of swelling with pain, and 13 patients (24.52 had a history of swelling with varied grades of dysphagia. In his series of 600 cases, Bhansali SK also reported that pain and dysphagia were reported by 13% and 12% patients respectively; but the majority of the cases were without any symptom [18]. In the study by Pal R et al., 93.2% of cases presented with neck swelling only [12]. On HPE, 46 patients (86.8%) had benign, and seven patients (13.2%) had malignant pathology. Colloid goitre was the most common benign pathology reported (33 patients, 62.3%). A study of 203 patients with nodular thyroid disease reported 76.4% patients with benign and 23.6% with malignant pathology [11].
The colloid goitre is the commonest among the benign thyroid nodules [19] In the current study also, the colloid goitre was commonest, followed by the follicular adenoma. This is similar to the study by Tamimi DM, who found colloid goitre (51%) to be the most common benign lesion followed by follicular adenoma (13%) [20].
In our study, six cases (11.3%) were papillary carcinoma out of seven malignant cases, and only one was follicular carcinoma (1.9%). This result correlates with the fact the papillary carcinoma is the most common variety of thyroid malignancies [21].
Fenton CL et al., in his study, showed that TTF-1 protein expression is detected in the nucleus of the majority of benign thyroid diseases and well-differentiated thyroid carcinomas [22]. Ordonez NG, in his study, showed that TTF-1 is positive in 96% of papillary, l00% of follicular, 20% of oxyphilic, and 90% of medullary carcinomas anaplastic carcinomas are essentially immunonegative for TTF-1 [23].
There is sufficient evidence of literature that showed that papillary carcinomas express strong and diffuse immunoreactivity for CK 7 in 80-100% of cases. The expression of CK7 is less frequent in cases of poorly differentiated carcinomas (60%). Medullary carcinomas have been reported to express strong positive staining for CK7 and CK18 in 77% of cases [24,25].
In conclusion, the current study had reported various clinicopathologic features of thyroid swellings with histopathological diagnosis. The majority of thyroid swellings were benign, and colloid goitre was the commonest. Our study has confirmed that the expression of TTF-1, CK7and Thyroglobulin is a valuable panel of immunohistochemical markers for diagnosis of papillary carcinoma and follicular carcinoma. However, there are many limitations in the current study. Firstly, the sample size is very small, and secondly, the number of malignant cases was less. We did not get cases of poorly differentiated carcinoma, anaplastic carcinoma and medullary carcinoma. The clinical utility of TTF-1, CK7and Thyroglobulin in thyroid cancer patients, has to be further defined by prospective studies with a larger sample size.

Ethical approval
The study was approved by Institutional Ethics Committee of Silchar Medical College. Written informed consent was taken from all the patients.

Conflicts of Interest
The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

Funding
None.