“…As we demonstrated previously, the combination of negative malignancy cytology result in absence of clinic-imaging signs indicative of a primary parotid malignancy (irregular borders, tumor size, and Journal of Surgical Oncology heterogeneity of US and/or CT scan) could decrease the possibility of a false-negative result with better À LR regarding carcinoma. On the other hand, high specificity and þ LR are obtained in terms of primary parotid malignancy, with good exact diagnosis frequency (58%), and this information, combined with frozen section analyses as noted by Zbaren et al [7] and Lin and Bhattacharyya [5], could give a better definition of surgical strategy for determination of surgical margins, tumor grade, extent of neoplasm and the consequent need for neck dissection, and extensive or conservative procedures (total vs. lateral parotidectomy, total vs. radical parotidectomy).…”