| Literature DB >> 26675671 |
Sebastian P Haen1,2, Philipp Stroebel3,4, Alexander Marx5, Daniela Suesskind6, Falko Fend7, Ursula Reichmann8, Hans-Georg Kopp9, Lothar Kanz10, Frank Mayer11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rare sites of metastases, atypical symptoms and paraneoplastic syndromes are often neglected or misinterpreted, especially when they represent early symptoms of an underlying malignant disease. Hence, an interdisciplinary approach to these patients is essential to avoid tumor progression and metastatic spread in order to provide curative treatment options to the patients. We here report the case of a young woman presenting with visual loss which led to diagnosis of a thymic carcinoma. CASEEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26675671 PMCID: PMC4682268 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-015-1968-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1Diagnostic evaluation. a and b Composite color fundus photographs of both eyes showing the amelanotic choroidal lesions (arrows) at the posterior pole of the right eye (a) and predominantly nasal superior to the optic disc in the left eye (b). c and d Radiographic imaging. CT scan of the chest (c). Note the large mediastinal mass with pleural spreading. MRI scan of the orbits (d). The arrow marks the choroidal lesion. e and f Histological appearance of the undifferentiated thymic carcinoma (400-fold magnification). The H&E stain (e) shows compact nests of undifferentiated epithelial cells with narrow cytoplasm without evidence of keratinization, large vesicular nuclei and high mitotic rate, separated by broad collagen bands (immunostaining for CD5). The tumor cells show a strong expression of CD5 (f) characteristic for an undifferentiated thymic carcinoma