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1.
BACKGROUND: Mixed medullary-follicular thyroid carcinoma (MMFTC) is a rare tumor that has been regarded as a clinicopathologic variant of medullary thyroid carcinoma. MMFTC represents a diagnostic challenge by fine needle aspiration cytology (FNAC). CASE: A 77-year-old woman had a palpable mass on the left side of the neck. It was diagnosed as follicular neoplasm by FNAC; she underwent total thyroidectomy. Pathology revealed follicular carcinoma. Radioactive iodine was administered. An enlarging mass was present in the left mandible later. FNAC showed suspicious follicular neoplasm with predominance of oncocytic cells. Pathology revealed follicular carcinoma with parafollicular cell differentiation. Immunohistochemical analysis demonstrated positive status for thyroglobulin and calcitonin. Simultaneous expression of thyroglobulin and calcitonin within the same neoplastic cell was considered. She underwent several courses of radioactive iodine therapy without significant effect. Interestingly, her serum calcitonin level was not elevated. CONCLUSION: Coexpression of thyroglobulin and calcitonin in the same cell is very rare. The component of medullary carcinoma should be considered when encountering an atypical thyroid carcinoma with predominance of cells showing oncocytic changes on FNAC and with clinically poor response to conventional treatment. Immunohistochemistry and pathologic analyses are helpful to confirm the diagnosis, especially in the absence of elevated serum calcitonin level.  相似文献   

2.
BACKGROUND: Fine needle aspiration (FNA) diagnosis of simultaneous medullary and papillary thyroid carcinoma in independent thyroid lobes is exceedingly rare. CASE: A 36-year-old female presented with a one-month history of dysphagia. Thyroid ultrasound revealed a multinodular goiter. She was clinically and biochemically euthyroid. FNA of the right thyroid nodule was consistent with medullary carcinoma, and FNA of the left thyroid lobe was consistent with papillary carcinoma. Immunohistochemistry revealed strong calcitonin and CEA positivity in the right lobe and lack of staining in the left lobe. Conversely, staining for thyroglobulin was negative on the right lobe and positive on the left lobe. CONCLUSION: The patient developed tumors in separate lobes of the thyroid. Immunoreactivity of calcitonin, CEA and thyroglobulin made a sharp distinction between the two tumors. Therefore, we conclude that these tumors were not linked by either embryology or genetics.  相似文献   

3.
BACKGROUND: A history of a nonthyroid malignancy may present a diagnostic dilemma in the assessment of fine needle aspiration (FNA) of thyroid nodules. One reported series, on patients with prior malignancies and a thyroid nodule, indicated that in 17% of patients, the thyroid nodule represented metastatic malignancy, 6% were classified as primary thyroid cancers, and the remainder were benign or inconclusive lesions. The resolution of this problem is essential to patient management. CASES: We report two cases in which patients with a history of renal cell carcinoma presented with a thyroid nodule. The first patient was an 80-year-old female whose Papanicolaou-stained FNA demonstrated clusters of round to polygonal cells with round to ovoid, hyperchromatic nuclei and abundant, wispy cytoplasm. The second patient was a 55-year-old female with clusters and single cells with round to oval, eccentric nuclei and copious, granular, gray cytoplasm noted on Papanicolaou-stained material. In each case, the diagnosis was inconclusive on initial review of Papanicolaou-stained slides, and immunohistochemical staining was ordered to better characterize the lesions. Tumor cells from case 1 were positive for cytokeratin cocktail and vimentin and negative for thyroglobulin, epithelial membrane antigen and calcitonin, suggestive of metastatic renal cell carcinoma. In contrast, the tumor cells from case 2 expressed cytokeratin, thyroglobulin and vimentin, consistent with a primary thyroid neoplasm. In each case, the cytologic diagnoses were confirmed in the resected specimens. CONCLUSION: Immunohistochemistry is a helpful adjunct in the evaluation of thyroid nodules in patients with a past history of malignancy.  相似文献   

4.
BACKGROUND: Renal cell carcinoma is an unpredictable tumor that can recur many years after the original diagnosis and metastasize to uncommon sites, including the thyroid gland. Differential diagnosis from primary thyroid tumor is often difficult both clinically and pathologically. We report a case of metastatic renal cell carcinoma in follicular adenoma of the thyroid gland. CASE: A 48-year-old woman presented with a 3-cm-diameter, palpable mass in the left lobe of the thyroid gland. The patient's history included removal of a left renal mass, which was conventional renal cell carcinoma. Fine needle aspiration cytology smears contained a few small clusters of polygonal cells with abundant, clear cytoplasm and irregular, hyperchromatic nuclei as well as bland-looking thyroid follicle cells and stromal cells. A papillary or follicular growth pattern was not detected. A cell block made from the aspirated sample was composed mainly of clear cells. By immunohistochemical stains, the clear cells were completely negative for TTF-1, thyroglobulin, calcitonin and inhibin while equivocally staining for cytokeratin, CD10 and galectin-3. The histologic diagnosis was renal cell carcinoma metastatic to follicular adenoma of the thyroid gland. CONCLUSION: Renal cell carcinoma metastatic to the thyroid may masquerade as a primary thyroid neoplasm. A history of prior nephrectomy, the presence of unremarkable thyroid follicle cells, the absence of a papillary or follicular growth pattern and immunohistochemical study can help differentiating metastatic renal cell carcinoma from a primary thyroid lesion with clear cell change.  相似文献   

5.
OBJECTIVE: The case of a 60-year-old male patient with follicular thyroid cancer who developed a pituitary mass proved to be a metastasis from thyroid cancer. METHODS: Assessment with whole-body scan, ultrasound, computed tomography and thyroglobulin measurements. RESULTS: Despite surgery and repeated doses of radioiodine, the patient developed diplopia and ptosis of the right eyelid, along with increasing thyroglobulin levels. A pituitary mass was discovered, with no signs of pituitary deficiency. The mass was removed and found to consist of neoplastic cells immunohistochemically positive to thyroglobulin. CONCLUSIONS: Distant metastases may develop in cases of follicular thyroid carcinoma, even after repeated doses of (131)I. Metastatic follicular thyroid carcinoma to the pituitary is a rare entity.  相似文献   

6.
Maly A  Meir K  Maly B 《Acta cytologica》2006,50(1):84-87
BACKGROUND: Neuroendocrine tumor metastatic to the thyroid gland is rare and may be difficult to differentiate from primary thyroid neuroendocrine tumors, such as medullary thyroid carcinoma (M/ITC). This report describes an unusual case of bronchial carcinoid metastatic to the thyroid diagnosed by fine needle aspiration cytology (FNAC). CASE: A 42-year-old woman with an undiagnosed bronchial carcinoid tumor presented to our clinic with a solitary nodule in the thyroid gland. FNAC of the nodule showed loosely cohesive groups of cuboidal tumor cells with scant, slightly granular cytoplasm; centrally located nuclei with a coarsely granular, salt-and-pepper chromatin pattern and inconspicuous nucleoli. Immunocytochemically the tumor cells were positive for neuron-specific enolase, chromogranin and synaptophysin and negative for thyroglobulin, calcitonin and carcinoembryonic antigen. The cytologic diagnosis of a metastatic neuroendocrine carcinoma was confirmed histologically. CONCLUSION: Metastasis to the thyroid gland may pose a diagnostic problem, particularly with tumors of neuroendocrine origin, as these have similar cytologic features in various organs. The correct preoperative cytologic diagnosis of metastatic carcinoid tumor in patients without a prior history of cancer and differential diagnosis with MTC are crucial because prognosis, workup and treatment are different in each.  相似文献   

7.
The peroxidase-antiperoxidase method for the demonstration of thyroglobulin was performed on 30 fine needle aspiration smears. All of the benign thyroid lesions plus the papillary and follicular carcinomas of the thyroid were positive for thyroglobulin. Two cases of metastatic thyroid carcinoma in lymph nodes were also positive. Medullary carcinoma of the thyroid and ten control smears from various other tissues were negative. This proves the sensitivity and the specificity of the method, which may be used in routine cytology and may add to the accuracy of diagnosing metastatic tumors suspected of being of thyroid origin. The intranuclear cytoplasmic vacuoles in papillary carcinoma of the thyroid were negative for thyroglobulin. This unexpected finding is demonstrated, and a possible explanation is offered.  相似文献   

8.
The biochemical properties of serum thyroglobulin obtained from six patients with follicular carcinoma of the thyroid and distant metastases to bone(s) have been studied. Since it is difficult to isolate sufficient thyroglobulin from serum samples, in vivo radioiodinated serum thyroglobulin obtained after radioiodine administration was used. In contrast to a sharp salting-out pattern observed with native thyroglobulin isolated from normal thyroid tissue, a broad salting-out curve was seen with metastatic serum thyroglobulin. The metastatic serum thyroglobulin eluted with low ionic strength from ion-exchange column. More than 95% of metastatic serum thyroglobulin could be bound to concanavalin-A sepharose and be eluted with 0.5 M alpha-methyl mannoside. The reactivity of metastatic serum thyroglobulin and native thyroglobulin towards concanavalin-A was comparable. Both types of thyroglobulins showed identical mobilities on sucrose linear density gradient centrifugation. The metastatic serum thyroglobulin from follicular carcinoma of the thyroid thus appears to be 19 S thyroglobulin with near normal concanavalin-A binding sugars but altered surface charges.  相似文献   

9.
BACKGROUND: Mixed differentiated thyroid carcinomas are rare tumors, difficult to recognize on fine needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB). Most cases are diagnosed only after histologic investigation. CASES: The cases entailed two cytologic samples and a thyroidectomy specimen. Two FNAB thyroidectomy specimens from a 60-year-old man presenting with a solitary thyroid nodule (case 1) were investigated. Both cytologic samples were referred as atypical, with a mixture of features indicating a proliferating follicular lesion but also containing some characteristics of medullary carcinoma. The serum calcitonin level was borderline. Surgery was recommended because of a suspicion of malignancy. The diagnosis of mixed medullary follicular carcinoma was established after a complex histologic investigation. The tumor was encapsulated, with partly microfollicular architecture. Immunohistochemistry was positive for both calcitonin and thyreoglobulin. Electron microscopy from the formol-paraffin block found neurosecretory granules in many cells. The patient was well one year after the operation. One FNAB and thyroidectomy specimen from a 47-year-old woman with long-treated lymphoplasmocellular thyroiditis (case 2) was investigated. The tumor in case 2 was diagnosed on FNAB as medullary carcinoma. Only after histologic and immunohistochemical investigation was mixed differentiation proven. CONCLUSION: Mixed differentiated thyroid tumors are a diagnostic challenge on fine needle aspiration. Irrespective of their rarity, they can be suspected if combined features are present. FNAB recognition of the medullary component in both cases was of crucial importance. Nevertheless, definitive diagnosis remains a histologic problem due to the necessity for topographic information.  相似文献   

10.
11.
BACKGROUND: Tumors showing neuroendocrine differentiation arise in a wide range of organs, and metastatic neuroendocrine tumors may be difficult to differentiate from primary tumors. This report describes an unusual case of metastatic breast carcinoma with neuroendocrine differentiation that presented as a solitary thyroid nodule. The diagnosis was made by fine needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB). CASE: A 52-year-old woman presented with a thyroid nodule and bilateral enlarged supraclavicular fossa lymph nodes. FNAB revealed a neuroendocrine carcinoma. Further questioning revealed that the patient had had a breast carcinoma resected eight years previously. The diagnosis of metastatic neuroendocrine breast carcinoma was established by immunocytochemistry. The patient received antiestrogen therapy but subsequently developed skeletal metastases. CONCLUSION: Neuroendocrine carcinomas from various sites show similar cytologic features. In this case, a diagnosis of breast carcinoma metastatic to the thyroid was suggested by the clinical history and confirmed by FNAB with immunocytochemistry.  相似文献   

12.
We describe 3 patients with metastatic medullary carcinoma of the thyroid who were treated with doxorubicin hydrochloride (Adriamycin). Serum calcitonin was measured before and after doxorubicin therapy. Doxorubicin failed to arrest the progression of the disease in any of the patients. Although serum calcitonin levels dropped in 1 patient during therapy, they remained markedly elevated in all 3 patients. From the present series it appears that medullary thyroid carcinoma often does not have a response to doxorubicin.  相似文献   

13.
The involvement of the testis by metastatic medullary thyroid carcinoma has never been described before. We describe the first case of metastatic medullary thyroid carcinoma affecting testis and inguinal lymph nodes. A 73-year-old Caucasian man was referred to undergo urologic surgery due to a painless nodule in the right testis and an homolateral inguinal lymphoadenomegaly. The patient had a history of medullary thyroid carcinoma with relapsing disease to the spine and lung nodules. Serum calcitonin and CEA levels were 175 pg/ml and 22 ng/ml, respectively. With suspected testicular cancer, the patient underwent radical right orchiectomy with the excision biopsy of the right inguinal lymph node. Histopathology and immunohistochemistry revealed that both the lesions were due to metastases from medullary thyroid carcinoma. Metastases to the testis and inguinal lymph nodes may be due to various solid and hematological tumors. This case, despite its rarity, suggests that testis and inguinal lymph nodes should be considered as potential secondary sites of medullary thyroid carcinoma as well.  相似文献   

14.
《Endocrine practice》2018,24(8):740-745
Objective: The accurate diagnosis of thyroid follicular/Hürthle cell tumors is challenging and a matter of controversy. We present a series of patients in whom a misclassification of follicular/Hürthle cell thyroid lesions as benign has led to devastating clinical outcomes.Methods: The Thyroid Cancer Registry of Rabin Medical Center was screened for patients with metastatic differentiated thyroid carcinoma (DTC) who had been initially diagnosed with benign follicular lesion between 1974 and 2015 and treated with hemithyroidectomy. Clinical, pathologic, and outcome data were collected from the medical files. Adequate pathology specimens, when available, were re-evaluated.Results: Seven patients met the inclusion criteria. The original pathologic diagnosis was follicular adenoma in 4 patients and Hürthle cell adenoma in 3 patients. Five patients had bone metastases, of whom one also had lung metastases and one, liver metastases. One patient had both cervical and lung metastases, and 1 patient had only meta-static neck lymph nodes. Six patients had a final diagnosis of encapsulated follicular variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma (EFVPTC), and 1 patient was diagnosed as having follicular thyroid cancer metastasis by bone biopsy. In 3 of the patients, capsular invasion was detected retrospectively; only 1 patient had evidence of vascular invasion. All 7 patients had high levels of thyroglobulin at diagnosis of metastatic DTC.Conclusion: Misclassification of follicular thyroid lesions as benign may lead to progressive disseminated DTC. To minimize the clinical risk of misdiagnosis, especially if a thorough evaluation of the specimens by an experienced pathologist is unfeasible, we suggest long-term follow-up of serum thyroglobulin levels.Abbreviations: DTC = differentiated thyroid carcinoma; EFVPTC = encapsulated follicular variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma; FVPTC = follicular variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma; NIFTP = noninvasive follicular thyroid neoplasm with papillary-like nuclear features; PTC = papillary thyroid carcinoma  相似文献   

15.
BACKGROUND: Intracytoplasmic lumina (ICL) have been observed frequently in breast carcinoma cells. However, they are extremely rare in thyroid gland tumors. We encountered a medullary carcinoma of the thyroid (MCT) with ICL and present a case with cytologic, immunocytochemical and ultrastructural features. CASE: A 15-year-old female was admitted with a left thyroid mass. Ultrasound examination revealed a well-defined tumor in the left lobe of the thyroid. Fine needle aspiration cytology showed mainly dispersed spindle cells with oval nuclei and some polymorphic or triangular tumor cells. The tumor cells containing ICL were noted at high magnification. The ICL contained sparse microvilli and abundant granular material with dense, round bodies on ultrastructural sections. Immunocytochemically, these tumor cells were positive for calcitonin and carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA). Moreover, CEA was recognized in the ICL with immunocytochemical staining. All tumor cells were negative for thyroglobulin. Pathologic examination confirmed the diagnosis of medullary carcinoma of the thyroid gland. CONCLUSION: MCT can include ICL with granular material containing CEA.  相似文献   

16.
AIM: To describe the visualization of recurrent disease by [111In]octreotide and 201Tl scintigraphy in a patient with Hürthle cell thyroid carcinoma, increased thyroglobulin levels, and a negative radio-iodine total-body scan. METHODS: Scintigraphy with [111In]octreotide and 201Tl was performed, and a local recurrence in the thyroid bed was detected which was excised by surgery. RESULTS: On histology, the tumour proved to be a Hürthle cell carcinoma, and within the tumour somatostatin receptors were detected by RT-PCR. CONCLUSION: Scintigraphy with [111In]octreotide and 201Tl is an alternative imaging method for the detection of residual disease in patients with a differentiated thyroid carcinoma having increased thyroglobulin levels and a negative radio-iodine total-body scan.  相似文献   

17.
A rare case is reported of melanin-producing medullary thyroid carcinoma in a 62-year-old man. Intraoperative imprints of the thyroid tumor revealed numerous detached tumor cells containing large amounts of brown pigment. The Fontana-Masson argentaffin reaction with bleach confirmed that those granules were melanin. Histologically, the tumor was composed of two different components--a medullary area with hyalinized stroma and a follicular area. Melanin was scattered in both areas. The tumor cells in both areas were immunoreactive to carcinoembryonic antigen, calcitonin, gastrin-releasing peptide, somatostatin, met.-enkephalin, neuron-specific enolase, chromogranin and neurofilaments, and negative for thyroglobulin and S-100 protein. The histologic diagnosis was melanin-producing medullary thyroid carcinoma with glandular differentiation. Although various kinds of peptides and amines have been reported to be produced in medullary thyroid carcinoma, melanin production is quite rare; this appears to be only the third reported case.  相似文献   

18.
INTRODUCTION: Calcitonin is a very sensitive marker of medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC). High concentrations of basal or pentagastrin stimulated calcitonin in patients with MTC is a signal of recurrence or metastatic disease. Detection of metastatic foci remains a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge. The aim of the study was to present examples of the use of ??Ga-DOTA-TATE PET-CT examinations in the diagnosis of patients with MTC and concomitant elevated serum calcitonin concentrations. Initially the study involved eight patients with MTC and elevated basal or stimulated calcitonin, in which earlier diagnostic imaging was negative for metastasis: neck ultrasound, chest and mediastinal CT scan, liver MRI, bone scintigraphy, and 1?F-FDG-PET. A total body scan was performed using ??Ga-DOTA-TATE PET-CT. Two patients with positive diagnostic imaging tests were referred for surgery including resection of cervical lymph nodes with histopathological examination for assessment of metastases. CONCLUSIONS: On the basis of the presented cases we conclude that PET-CT scan with somatostatin analogue labelled with gallium (??Ga-DOTA-TATE PET-CT) may be useful in the diagnostic imaging of patients with disseminated MTC.  相似文献   

19.
S. Mandal, and S. Jain
Adenoid cystic pattern in follicular variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma: a report of four cases Objective: An adenoid cystic pattern in thyroid tumours is a rare finding that may be seen in papillary carcinoma of thyroid (PCT), the follicular variant of PCT (FV‐PCT), a rare cribriform‐morular variant of papillary carcinoma of thyroid (CMV‐PCT) and follicular carcinoma. There is little published cytological literature describing these patterns. We report four cases of PCT with this unusual pattern. Methods: Fine needle aspiration (FNA) cytology was performed on four patients with a neck lump using a 22‐G needle; smears were stained with Giemsa and Papanicolaou stains. Immunocytochemical staining for thyroglobulin was done in all cases. Results: The patients were female and ranged in age from 18 to 46 years. They presented with a gradually increasing mass in the neck. FNA smears in all cases showed nuclear features of PCT. There were also prominent follicular areas with hyaline globules in some of the cell clusters reminiscent of adenoid cystic carcinoma and, in places, morula‐like groups of neoplastic cells were also seen. Immunocytochemistry for thyroglobulin was positive in all cases but negative in the hyaline globules. Conclusions: Adenoid cystic areas with morula‐like groups in PCT are a rare finding. Cytopathologists and clinicians should be aware of these distinct features in thyroid tumours to avoid diagnosing metastatic adenoid cystic carcinoma. It is also important to rule out CMV‐PCT since that variant is mostly associated with familial adenomatous polyposis, although sporadic occurrence is known.  相似文献   

20.
Seven patients with medullary carcinoma of the thyroid were investigated, and the thyrocalcitonin activity of the primary tumours, metastatic deposits, and the serum was estimated.Medullary carcinomas of the thyroid with amyloid stroma contain 100 to 600 times more thyrocalcitonin than normal thyroid tissue, and lymph nodes with metastatic deposits are equally rich in the hormone. High values of thyrocalcitonin are also found in the blood of these patients. Medullary carcinoma of the thyroid with amyloid stroma is the first disease to be recognized in which there is hypersecretion of thyrocalcitonin.  相似文献   

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