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Incidental Poorly Differentiated Thyroid Cancer in Trauma Patient

Poorly differentiated carcinomas tend to arise de novo or transform from differentiated thyroid carcinomas. Females, middle-aged and elderly adults are most commonly affected. Patients present with an enlarging thyroid mass which is often locally advanced at presentation. This is a case of 30-year-o...

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Autores principales: Grana Santini, Alberto Javier, Alvarado, Milliette, Gonzalez-Rodriguez, Loida Alejandra, Ramirez, Margarita, Ortega, Nydia Ivette Burgos, Canales, Nicolle
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8089844/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1821
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author Grana Santini, Alberto Javier
Alvarado, Milliette
Gonzalez-Rodriguez, Loida Alejandra
Ramirez, Margarita
Ortega, Nydia Ivette Burgos
Canales, Nicolle
author_facet Grana Santini, Alberto Javier
Alvarado, Milliette
Gonzalez-Rodriguez, Loida Alejandra
Ramirez, Margarita
Ortega, Nydia Ivette Burgos
Canales, Nicolle
author_sort Grana Santini, Alberto Javier
collection PubMed
description Poorly differentiated carcinomas tend to arise de novo or transform from differentiated thyroid carcinomas. Females, middle-aged and elderly adults are most commonly affected. Patients present with an enlarging thyroid mass which is often locally advanced at presentation. This is a case of 30-year-old male patient admitted after burn injury who presented with neck enlarging mass. He had no family history of thyroid CA, no radiation exposure and normal thyroid function tests. Neck CT imaging found with heterogeneous enhancing mass arising from the left thyroid lobe. Thyroid ultrasound consistent with a large left thyroid lobe lesion described as a complex solid component measures at least 5.2 cm long x 4.0 cm AP by 5.0 cm transverse with coarse scattered echogenic foci, and smaller bright echoes with comet-tail artifacts. Fine needle biopsy was non-diagnostic or unsatisfactory. Second FNA with Atypia of undetermined significance. Left hemithyroidectomy performed consistent with a 5cm Poorly differentiated thyroid carcinoma arising in a preexisting papillary thyroid carcinoma with extensive necrosis, pT3aNx, TTF1 +, PAX 8 +, CK7 +. Right thyroid was negative for malignancy. A Therapeutic dose of 135.7 mCi of 131-iodine was given. Subsequent whole body scan with focal findings in the thyroid bed region is consistent with residual functional thyroid tissue. Follow up with normal thyroglobulin levels and negative thyroglobulin antibodies. Neck ultrasound without abnormal tissue or nodules seen at either thyroid bed. Follow up with 18-F-FDG PET/CT scan abnormal study with avid lymph node in the right side of the neck, Level 3. FNA lymph node, cervical right level 3, 1.1cm, ultrasound guided biopsy negative for metastatic carcinoma. Poorly differentiated thyroid carcinomas present as large thyroid masses. The tumor spreads by local invasion into perithyroidal tissues and by distant metastases. Poorly differentiated carcinoma is supported by immunohistochemical staining for Tg, TTF1, and paired box protein Pax 8 (PAX8). There is no standardized treatment for PDTC to date. If possible, a total thyroidectomy including lymph node dissection should be performed to improve survival rates. Due to the higher rate of ETE, positive margins, neck disease, and distant metastases, adjuvant treatment should be considered. Some experts recommended considering adjuvant RAI in all PDTC patients, giving the potential benefit and lack of morbidity. However, despite the capability of RAI uptake in a high percentage of PDTC, no significant impact on survival has been reported. It is important to recognize prognosis of PDTC is distinctly less favorable than that of PTC or FTC. Several factors have been identified to affect patient prognosis such as extensive tumor necrosis, >45 year of age, tumor size (>5 cm), extrathyroidal extension and distant metastases are unfavorable prognostic factors.
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spelling pubmed-80898442021-05-06 Incidental Poorly Differentiated Thyroid Cancer in Trauma Patient Grana Santini, Alberto Javier Alvarado, Milliette Gonzalez-Rodriguez, Loida Alejandra Ramirez, Margarita Ortega, Nydia Ivette Burgos Canales, Nicolle J Endocr Soc Thyroid Poorly differentiated carcinomas tend to arise de novo or transform from differentiated thyroid carcinomas. Females, middle-aged and elderly adults are most commonly affected. Patients present with an enlarging thyroid mass which is often locally advanced at presentation. This is a case of 30-year-old male patient admitted after burn injury who presented with neck enlarging mass. He had no family history of thyroid CA, no radiation exposure and normal thyroid function tests. Neck CT imaging found with heterogeneous enhancing mass arising from the left thyroid lobe. Thyroid ultrasound consistent with a large left thyroid lobe lesion described as a complex solid component measures at least 5.2 cm long x 4.0 cm AP by 5.0 cm transverse with coarse scattered echogenic foci, and smaller bright echoes with comet-tail artifacts. Fine needle biopsy was non-diagnostic or unsatisfactory. Second FNA with Atypia of undetermined significance. Left hemithyroidectomy performed consistent with a 5cm Poorly differentiated thyroid carcinoma arising in a preexisting papillary thyroid carcinoma with extensive necrosis, pT3aNx, TTF1 +, PAX 8 +, CK7 +. Right thyroid was negative for malignancy. A Therapeutic dose of 135.7 mCi of 131-iodine was given. Subsequent whole body scan with focal findings in the thyroid bed region is consistent with residual functional thyroid tissue. Follow up with normal thyroglobulin levels and negative thyroglobulin antibodies. Neck ultrasound without abnormal tissue or nodules seen at either thyroid bed. Follow up with 18-F-FDG PET/CT scan abnormal study with avid lymph node in the right side of the neck, Level 3. FNA lymph node, cervical right level 3, 1.1cm, ultrasound guided biopsy negative for metastatic carcinoma. Poorly differentiated thyroid carcinomas present as large thyroid masses. The tumor spreads by local invasion into perithyroidal tissues and by distant metastases. Poorly differentiated carcinoma is supported by immunohistochemical staining for Tg, TTF1, and paired box protein Pax 8 (PAX8). There is no standardized treatment for PDTC to date. If possible, a total thyroidectomy including lymph node dissection should be performed to improve survival rates. Due to the higher rate of ETE, positive margins, neck disease, and distant metastases, adjuvant treatment should be considered. Some experts recommended considering adjuvant RAI in all PDTC patients, giving the potential benefit and lack of morbidity. However, despite the capability of RAI uptake in a high percentage of PDTC, no significant impact on survival has been reported. It is important to recognize prognosis of PDTC is distinctly less favorable than that of PTC or FTC. Several factors have been identified to affect patient prognosis such as extensive tumor necrosis, >45 year of age, tumor size (>5 cm), extrathyroidal extension and distant metastases are unfavorable prognostic factors. Oxford University Press 2021-05-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8089844/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1821 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) ), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Thyroid
Grana Santini, Alberto Javier
Alvarado, Milliette
Gonzalez-Rodriguez, Loida Alejandra
Ramirez, Margarita
Ortega, Nydia Ivette Burgos
Canales, Nicolle
Incidental Poorly Differentiated Thyroid Cancer in Trauma Patient
title Incidental Poorly Differentiated Thyroid Cancer in Trauma Patient
title_full Incidental Poorly Differentiated Thyroid Cancer in Trauma Patient
title_fullStr Incidental Poorly Differentiated Thyroid Cancer in Trauma Patient
title_full_unstemmed Incidental Poorly Differentiated Thyroid Cancer in Trauma Patient
title_short Incidental Poorly Differentiated Thyroid Cancer in Trauma Patient
title_sort incidental poorly differentiated thyroid cancer in trauma patient
topic Thyroid
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8089844/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1821
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