| Literature DB >> 25988151 |
João Vinagre1, Fátima Borges2, António Costa3, Maria Inês Alvelos4, Glaúcia Mazeto5, Manuel Sobrinho-Simões6, Paula Soares7.
Abstract
Resistance to thyroid hormone (RTH) represents a syndrome in which patients present elevated circulating thyroid hormones in the presence of non-suppressed TSH. We report a novel case where a patient with RTH presented a differentiated thyroid cancer. A19 year-old female had been referred due to thyroid disease that disclosed features characteristic of a RTH. During the follow up it was detected a follicular tumor that led to the recommendation for thyroid surgical ablation, where an incidental papillary thyroid microcarcinoma (mPTC) was found. The increase of thyroglobulin (TG) levels following thyroid removal referred the patient for radioiodine treatment. Post-treatment, it was detected jugular adenopathies and the patient was subjected to cervical lymph node drainage where metastases of the mPTC were found. RTH syndrome was confirmed by the detection of a THRB germline mutation. A BRAF mutation was also found in the mPTC but not detected in the follicular adenoma or normal adjacent tissue. The young age of the patient, the rarity of BRAF mutations in childhood and the high dissemination of the malignancy, lead us to the speculation that increased TSH stimulation in a RTH background and oncogenic activation of BRAF could have served as (co) drivers and might have triggered an advanced stage of the neoplastic disease. These findings together with a review of published cases add novel information to the management of RTH patients with differentiated thyroid cancer.Entities:
Keywords: BRAF; THRB; mPTC; resistance to thyroid hormone; thyroid cancer
Year: 2014 PMID: 25988151 PMCID: PMC4429638 DOI: 10.3389/fmolb.2014.00010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Biosci ISSN: 2296-889X
Figure 1Major events, clinical measurements and therapy management of the patient referring the period on first appearance until the last appointment. Abbreviations: TMZ, Thiamazole; LT4, Levothyroxine.
Figure 2Haematoxylin-eosin stained histological sections of a follicular adenoma, initially detected in the patient (A); a papillary microcarcinoma (B); and metastasis of the mPTC in a lymph node following the cervical drainage (C). The total magnification of the sections is 200X. Molecular genotyping of the samples detected the presence of a THRB germline mutation detected in DNA extracted from blood cells (D). Somatic mutation analysis disclosed the presence of a BRAF V600E alteration in the mPTC (E, bottom sequence) whereas a wild-type BRAF sequence was present in the normal adjacent tissue (E, top sequence).
Review of known cases of RTH patients with differentiated thyroid cancer.
| Taniyama et al., | 46 | F | FvPTC | 5 mm | 1. Methimazole | NA | |
| 2. Subtotal thyroidectomy | |||||||
| Kim et al., | 38 | F | PTC | 4 mm | 1. Levothyroxin | NA | |
| 2. Total thyroidectomy | |||||||
| Paragliola et al., | 48 | M | PTC | 24 mm | ND | 1. Levothyroxin | 9.5 years |
| 2. Total thyroidectomy | In remission | ||||||
| Paragliola et al., | 63 | M | PTC | 6 mm | 1. Levothyroxin | 5 years | |
| 2. Total thyroidectomy | In remission | ||||||
| Unluturk et al., | 29 | F | PTC | 8 mm | 1. Levothyroxin | 21 years | |
| 2. Subtotal thyroidectomy (1st approach) | In remission | ||||||
| 2. Completion thyroidectomy and radioiodine (2nd approach) | |||||||
| Unluturk et al., | 33 | F | PTC | 12 mm | ND | 1. Levothyroxin | 1 year |
| 2. Total thyroidectomy and radioiodine | In remission | ||||||
| Ramos-Prol et al., | 9 | F | PTC | 24 mm | 1. TRIAC and levothyroxine | 2 years | |
| 2. Total thyroidectomy and radioiodine | In remission | ||||||
| Current case | 19 | F | PTC | 4 mm | 1. Levothyroxin | 6 years | |
| 2. Total thyroidectomy and radioiodine | In remission | ||||||
RTH, Resistance to thyroid hormone syndrome; DTC, Differentiated thyroid cancer; FvPTC, Follicular variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma; PTC, Papillary thyroid carcinoma; ND, Not detected; NA, Not available; TRIAC, Triiodothyroacetic acid;
multifocal tumors.