| Literature DB >> 27282149 |
Mioko Matsuo1, Masazumi Tuneyoshi2, Mari Mine3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Primary mucinous carcinoma of the thyroid gland is a rare disease; only 6 cases of primary mucinous carcinoma of the thyroid have been previously reported. Primary mucinous carcinoma of the thyroid gland with incomplete tumor resection tends to be associated with a poor prognosis, resulting in death within a few months. An early and appropriate diagnosis may contribute to improvement in patient prognosis; however, it is extremely difficult to diagnose primary mucinous carcinoma of the thyroid. We present the seventh reported case of primary mucinous carcinoma in the thyroid gland; moreover, rhabdoid cells were detected, which, to our knowledge, is a novel finding. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Mucinous carcinoma; Rhabdoid cells; TSH suppression; Thyroid cancer
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27282149 PMCID: PMC4901411 DOI: 10.1186/s13000-016-0500-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagn Pathol ISSN: 1746-1596 Impact factor: 2.644
Fig. 1Computed tomography of mass in the thyroid gland. The invasion of muscles in the anterior region is indicated with an arrow
Fig. 2Pathological and immunohistochemical staining resulting in the diagnosis of primary mucinous carcinoma. a A large pool of extracellular mucin (hematoxylin-eosin, 10×). b Abundant mucus with large atypical cells (hematoxylin-eosin, 40×; the arrows point to the extracellular mucin). c: Mucinous material positive with Alcian blue staining. d Mucinous material positive with mucicarmine staining. e Tumor cells immunoreactive for thyroid transcription factor-1 (immunoperoxidase, 10×). f Tumor cells immunoreactive for thyroglobulin (immunoperoxidase, 40×)
Fig. 3Pathological and immunohistochemical staining for the detection of rhabdoid cells. a Rhabdoid cells (hematoxylin-eosin 40×, arrow). b Rhabdoid cells positive for vimentin (arrow)
Fig. 4Computed tomography indicating recurrence in the paratracheal lymph node. The paratracheal lymph node is indicated with an arrow
Summary of seven case studies with primary mucinous carcinoma
| First author (year) | Age/sex | LN/distant metastasis | Treatment | Prognosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diaz [ | 44/M | No/No | Hemithyroidectomy immediately after diagnosis, followed by total thyroidectomy + ND | 7y NED |
| Sobrinho [ | 56/M | Yes/No | Total thyroidectomy + ND | 1y Recurrence (intestinal tract and lungs) |
| Cruz [ | 32/F | Yes/No | Total thyroidectomy + ND | 2 m Recurrence (thyroid gland, skin, and lungs) |
| Kondo [ | 82/F | Yes/No | Hemithyroidectomy + ND | 2y Recurrence (LN and skin) |
| Antonio [ | 62/F | Yes/No | Total thyroidectomy + ND (incomplete resection) | 6 m DOD |
| Mnif [ | 56/M | Yes/No | Total thyroidectomy + ND (incomplete resection) | 1 m DOD |
| Present case | 81/F | Yes/No | Hemithyroidectomy | 10 m Recurrence(LN) |
M male, F female, LN lymph node, ND neck dissection, NED no evidence of disease, DOD died of disease, RT radiotherapy, CH chemotherapy, 5FU 5-fluorouracil, Tx treatment, BLM bleomycin, VCR vincristine, ADM adriamycin