Workup for an Enlarged Solitary Cervical Lymph Node
Begin with a focused history and physical examination to stratify malignancy risk, then proceed directly to imaging (ultrasound or CT) and excisional biopsy for nodes >1.5 cm, firm texture, reduced mobility, or duration >2 weeks without infectious etiology. 1
Initial Risk Stratification Through History
High-risk historical features that mandate aggressive workup include: 1
- Age >40 years (traditional head and neck squamous cell carcinoma risk) 1
- Tobacco use and alcohol abuse 1
- HPV-related risk factors: increased number of sexual partners and oral sex exposure (note: HPV-positive oropharyngeal cancer may occur without traditional risk factors) 1
- Immunocompromised status (HIV, organ transplant, immunosuppressive medications) 1, 2
- Concerning symptoms: hoarseness, otalgia, hearing loss, intraoral swelling/ulceration, new oral numbness, dyspnea, odynophagia, dysphagia, weight loss, hemoptysis, nasal congestion, unilateral epistaxis 1
- B symptoms (fever, night sweats, weight loss) suggest lymphoma and require expedited referral with PET-CT 2, 3
- Prior head and neck malignancy including skin cancer of scalp, face, or neck 1
Physical Examination Findings That Indicate Malignancy
Suspicious nodal characteristics requiring immediate workup: 1
- Size >1.5 cm in any cervical location (jugulodigastric nodes up to 1.5 cm may be normal) 1
- Firm or hard texture (though HPV-positive head and neck cancer can present with soft, cystic masses) 1
- Reduced mobility in longitudinal or transverse planes 1
- Ulceration of overlying skin 1
- Multiple, grouped, or matted lymph nodes 1
- Continued increase in size 1
- Duration ≥2 weeks without infectious etiology 1, 4
- Supraclavicular location (always abnormal and highly concerning for malignancy) 4, 5
Diagnostic Imaging
For any node meeting high-risk criteria, obtain imaging before or concurrent with biopsy: 1, 2
- CT neck with IV contrast to evaluate deep extension, though it has limited soft tissue characterization (43-55% sensitivity for parametrial invasion in cervical cancer studies) 1
- Ultrasound can assess for loss of fatty hilum, round shape (versus oval), heterogeneous echogenicity, and central necrosis—all concerning features 3
- Chest radiograph to evaluate for synchronous bronchial tumors or mediastinal involvement 1
- PET-CT if B symptoms present or lymphoma suspected 2
Laboratory Evaluation
Obtain these studies before or concurrent with specialist referral: 2
- Complete blood count with differential (assess for atypical lymphocytosis, leukemia, cytopenias) 2, 6
- Comprehensive metabolic panel including LDH 2
- β2-microglobulin 2
- HIV testing (especially in younger patients or those with risk factors) 1, 2
- Serum soluble IL-2 receptor (useful adjunct in determining biopsy necessity) 7
Biopsy Strategy
Excisional biopsy is the gold standard for definitive diagnosis and should not be delayed in high-risk presentations: 2, 7, 5
- Excisional biopsy preserves nodal architecture necessary for accurate lymphoma classification and is superior to fine-needle aspiration 2, 7
- Fresh tissue must be sent in saline (not formalin) for flow cytometry, immunohistochemistry, and molecular studies 2, 6
- Core needle biopsy or fine-needle aspiration may be considered for initial evaluation but often require subsequent excisional biopsy for definitive diagnosis 5
Observation Period (Low-Risk Cases Only)
A 2-4 week observation period is acceptable ONLY for: 4, 5
- Nodes <1.5 cm with soft texture and mobile consistency 1, 4
- Clear infectious etiology present 4
- No high-risk historical features 1
- Age <40 years without other risk factors 1, 4
However, 38% of persistently enlarged cervical nodes prove malignant (61 metastatic disease, 62 lymphoma in one series), so threshold for biopsy should be low. 8
Referral Pathways
Immediate hematology-oncology referral for: 2
- Nodes >1.5 cm in long axis or >1.0 cm in short axis 2
- Hard or matted nodes 2
- Distribution across multiple anatomical regions 2
- B symptoms present 2
- Immunosuppression history 2
ENT/surgical oncology referral for: 1
- Suspected head and neck primary malignancy based on symptoms (hoarseness, dysphagia, otalgia) 1
- Need for excisional biopsy 2
Critical Pitfalls to Avoid
- Do not empirically treat with antibiotics without clear infectious etiology—this delays diagnosis of malignancy 5
- Do not use corticosteroids without appropriate diagnosis—they have limited usefulness and may obscure lymphoma 5
- Do not rely on size alone—normal-sized nodes can harbor microscopic metastases, and enlarged nodes may be hyperplastic 3
- Do not send tissue in formalin if lymphoma suspected—fresh tissue in saline is required for flow cytometry 2, 6
- Supraclavicular nodes are always abnormal—immediate workup required regardless of other features 4, 5
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