| Literature DB >> 26266011 |
Stylianos Mandanas1, Efterpi Margaritidou1, Varvara Christoforidou2, Eleni Karoglou3, Chrysoula Geranou3, Alexandra Chrisoulidou1, Maria Boudina1, Konstantinos Georgopoulos1, Kalliopi Pazaitou-Panayiotou1.
Abstract
Medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) is a rare malignancy that may metastasize to liver, lungs and bones. Breast is an unusual metastatic site for MTC and only 20 female cases have been reported in the literature. We present a male patient in whom histological examination and immunohistochemistry of a breast mass were indicative of breast metastasis from MTC. A 67-year-old man with recent diagnosis of MTC and metastases to cervical and upper mediastinum lymph nodes was referred to our department for further treatment. At first evaluation, diagnostic imaging techniques showed lung and bone metastases and three months later the presence of liver metastases. Due to the extension of the disease, treatment with vandetanib was decided, but serious adverse events led to its interruption after two weeks. During follow-up, patient developed a painful swelling in the right breast. Ultrasound and mammography showed the presence of multiple masses to the right breast suspicious for malignancy. Core needle biopsy and histological examination of the specimen confirmed the presence of metastatic MTC. Palliative external beam irradiation was used to relieve local pain and, after one month, the patient died. Consequently, breast masses should be cautiously evaluated, mainly in the presence of a known primary malignancy. Histological and/or cytopathological examination are requisite diagnostic tools, while external beam irradiation and tyrosine kinase inhibitors may be used as palliative therapies in the concurrent presence of breast metastases from MTC.Entities:
Keywords: Medullary thyroid cancer; breast metastasis; tyrosine kinase inhibitor
Year: 2015 PMID: 26266011 PMCID: PMC4508642 DOI: 10.4081/rt.2015.5765
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rare Tumors ISSN: 2036-3605
Figure 1.Craniocaudal mammographic view shows well circumscribed lesions mainly in the right breast.
Figure 2.A hypoechoic mass with lobular appearance and hyperechoic diaphragms on ultrasound examination (A). Doppler examination reveals internal vascularity of the mass (B).
Figure 3.Nests of uniform round to slightly spindle cells (100×) in a fibrous tissue (A). Tumor cells (600×) contain round to oval hyperchromatic nuclei with occasional nucleoli. A mitosis is evident (B).
Figure 4.Neoplastic cells (100×) stain positively for thyroid transcription factor-1 (TTF-1) (A). Neoplastic cells (200×) show strong reactivity for calcitonin (B). Neoplastic cells (100×) are negatively stained for estrogen receptor. The adjacent epithelial cells of a mammary duct show estrogen receptor reactivity and is considered as an internal positive control (C). Neoplastic cells (100×) are positively stained for chromogranin (D).
Demographic and radiology characteristics, presence of metastases and alive status of patients with metastatic medullary thyroid carcinoma to the breast (20 cases)
| First author, year | Age | MEN 2 | Breast affected and number of metastatic nodules | Mammography-U/S | Metastases | Deceased/alive |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Martinez-Rodriguez, 2013 | 51 | No | R-1 | No-No | Liver, bones, thoracic wall | A |
| Rodriguez-Gil, 2012 | 43 | No | Bilateral-3 | Yes-No | Bone | D |
| Basu, 2010 | 32 | NR | L-1 | NR-NR | NR | NR |
| Ricciato, 2010 | 54 | No | L-1 | Yes-Yes | Cervical lymph nodes, liver, lungs, rib | A |
| Andreiuolo, 2009 | 57 | No | Bilateral-2 | Yes-Yes | NR | NR |
| Marcy, 2009 | 43 | No | Bilateral-M | No-Yes | Cervical lymph nodes, tracheal wall | D |
| Nofech-Mozes, 2008 | 50 | No | L-1 | Yes-Yes | Cervical lymph nodes, liver | A |
| Kim, 2008 | 39 | No | R-2 | No-No | Cervical lymph nodes, liver | A |
| Kang, 2008 | 38 | No | Bilateral-2 | Yes-Yes | Cervical lymph nodes | A |
| Vaughan, 2007 | 35 | Yes | L-1 | Yes-Yes | Unknown distant metastases | D |
| Vaughan, 2007 | 29 | Yes | L-1 | Yes-No | Unknown distant metastases | D |
| Vaughan, 2007 | 30 | Yes | Bilateral-2 | Yes-Yes | Unknown distant metastases | A |
| Lee, 2007 | 48 | NR | NR-M | NR-NR | Cervical lymph nodes | NR |
| Ishitobi, 2004 | 54 | No | Bilateral-M | Yes-Yes | NR | NR |
| Pritchett, 1998 | 42 | No | R-1 | No-No | Cervical lymph nodes, lungs, brain | D |
| Kiely, 1995 | 64 | No | L-1 | Yes-Yes | Cervical lymph nodes | A |
| Soo, 1995 | 40 | Yes | L-2 | Yes-No | Cervical lymph nodes, liver | NR |
| Ali, 1994 | 28 | Yes | NR-NR | NR-NR | NR | NR |
| Ahuja, 1991 | 32 | NR | NR-M | NR-NR | Cervical lymph nodes, lungs, bones | D |
| Ordonez, 1988 | 72 | No | R-2 | No-No | Cervical lymph nodes, skin | D |
MEN, multiple endocrine neoplasia; NR, not reported; M, multiple; A, alive; D, deceased.