| Literature DB >> 31723720 |
Aditya Dutta1, Rimesh Pal1, Nimisha Jain1, Pinaki Dutta1, Ashutosh Rai2, Anil Bhansali1, Arunanshu Behera3, Uma Nahar Saikia4, Vikarn Vishwajeet4, David Collier5, Hannah Boon6, Márta Korbonits5, Sanjay Kumar Bhadada1.
Abstract
Primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT) is a rare endocrine disease in the pediatric population. Sporadic parathyroid adenomas remain the most common cause of pediatric PHPT. Parathyroid carcinoma (PC) is an extremely rare cause of pediatric PHPT. We report a 16-year-old boy presenting with a nonhealing fragility fracture of the right leg along with florid features of rickets. Examination revealed a neck mass, mimicking a goiter. Biochemical findings were consistent with PHPT. Imaging was suggestive of a right inferior parathyroid mass infiltrating the right lobe of thyroid. The patient underwent en bloc surgical excision of the parathyroid mass along with the right lobe of thyroid. Histopathology was suggestive of a PC. He achieved biochemical remission with normalization of serum calcium and parathyroid hormone levels. At follow-up, there was no biochemical or imaging evidence of recurrence or metastasis. Genetic analysis revealed heterozygous germline deletion of CDC73. An extensive literature search on PC was conducted, with an emphasis on the pediatric population. Thirteen cases of pediatric PC were identified. The median age of presentation was 13 years; there was no sex predilection. All cases were symptomatic; 31% had a visible neck mass. The median serum calcium and intact parathyroid hormone levels were 14.3 mg/dL and 2000 pg/mL, respectively. All patients underwent surgical excision, with 27% showing metastatic relapse. Our findings indicate that the preoperative features that could point toward a diagnosis of PC in a child with PHPT are a tumor size of >3 cm, thyroid infiltration on imaging, and severe hypercalcemia at presentation.Entities:
Keywords: hyperparathyroidism-jaw tumor syndrome; pediatric parathyroid carcinoma; primary hyperparathyroidism; rickets
Year: 2019 PMID: 31723720 PMCID: PMC6839529 DOI: 10.1210/js.2019-00081
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Endocr Soc ISSN: 2472-1972
Figure 1.Clinical photograph of the patient showing (a) shortened and internally rotated right leg, (b) prominent right-sided neck swelling, and (c) broadened right wrist suggestive of rickets.
Figure 2.Radiograph of the patient showing (a) subperiosteal resorption of the phalanges, widening of the growth plates of the right wrist, cupping and fraying of the distal ends of right radius and ulna (green arrow); (b) bilateral coxa vara; and (c) thinning of the cortices of leg bones, fracture of the right tibia and ulna, and well-defined lytic lesion involving the proximal part of left tibia. (d) CT of the neck (axial image) showing a 3.6 × 2.5 × 2.7 cm homogenously hypodense mass (black arrow) infiltrating postero-inferiorly into the right lobe of the thyroid (orange arrow).
Figure 3.(a) Photomicrograph showing parathyroid tumor tissue (black arrowheads) infiltrating the thyroid parenchyma causing follicular destruction (red arrow; hematoxylin and eosin; magnification ×100). (b) The tumor is seen causing vascular invasion (black arrow; hematoxylin and eosin; magnification ×100) and (c) perineural invasion (black arrow; hematoxylin and eosin; magnification ×200). (d) Ki-67 labeling index of the tumor tissue is 15% (magnification ×400).
Figure 4.Parafibromin immunohistochemistry (magnification ×400) showing (a) diffuse positivity in normal parathyroid tissue as compared with (b) sparse nuclear positivity in index parathyroid carcinoma. Representative images of (c) positive control (colonic mucosa) and (d) negative control (hepatocytes).
Table Enlisting all 14 Pediatric Parathyroid Cancer Cases According to Year of Publication
| Case No. [Ref] | Age (y)/Sex | FH | Calcium/iPTH | Presenting Complaint | Location, Size (cm), Weight (g) | Surgery Performed | Relapse, Location | Follow-up | Tumor IHC/Genetic Analysis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 [2] | 13/NA | NA | NA | NA | NA, NA, NA | NA | NA | NA | NA/NA |
| 2 [3] | 13/F | NA | 15.9/NA | Bone pain, neck mass | RSPA, NA, 15 g | Simple excision | Yes, lung | Hypercalcemia | NA/NA |
| 3 [3] | 16/F | NA | 15.6/2000 | Anorexia, vomiting, renal calculi | LSPA, NA, 2 | Simple excision | No | Normocalcemia | NA/NA |
| 4 [4] | 15/M | NA | 16.0/800 | Pancreatitis, seizures | LIPA, 2×2, NA | Simple excision, rim of thyroid excised | No | NA | NA/NA |
| 5 [5] | 14/M | Yes | 13.2/3328 | Bone disease, myopathy, polyuria, polydipsia | RIPA, 3×3.5, NA |
| No | Normocalcemia | NA/NA |
| 6 [6] | 15/M | NA | 20.7/358 | Neck mass, vomiting, fatigue, weight loss | LIPA, 3×2×2, 11.9 |
| No | Normocalcemia | NA/NA |
| 7 [7] | 8/F | Yes | 14.3/190 | Renal calculi, lethargy, anorexia, neck mass | LIPA, 1.5×1×1, 2 | Simple excision | No | Normocalcemia | NA/MEN 1 analysis negative |
| 8 [8] | 10.5/M | Yes | 15.5/300 | Bone pain, fatigue, anorexia | Mediastinum, NA, NA | Mediastinal mass excision, thymectomy | No | Normocalcemia | NA/NA |
| 9 [9] | 14/F | No | 14.3/2792 | Polyarthralgia, myopathy, deformities, depression | RIPA, 2.5, NA | Right hemithyroidectomy | No | Normocalcemia | NA/NA |
| 10 [10] | 13/F | No | 12.0/8368 | Neck mass | Right thyroid, 3.5×3×2, 22 |
| Yes, lung | Hypercalcemia | NA/NA |
| 11 [11] | 11/M | NA | NA/1630 | Bowing of legs | RIPA, NA, NA | Simple excision, then hemithyroidectomy | No | Normocalcemia | NA/NA |
| 12 [12] | 10/F | NA | 12.2/2217 | Pain abdomen, deformities | LPA, NA, NA | NA | NA | NA | NA/NA |
| 13 [13] | 8/F | No | 12.5/453 | Pathological fracture, renal calculi, weight loss, fatigue | Multiple neck masses, NA, NA | Simple excision (n = 3), | Yes, neck nodules, lung | Hypercalcemia | NA/heterozygous partial deletion of |
| 14 | 16/M | No | 15.6/2028 | Nonhealing fracture, neck mass, short stature, calculi | RIPA, 3×3×2.5, 10 |
| No | Normocalcemia | Sparse parafibromin nuclear staining/heterozygous deletion of |
Abbreviations: FH, family history; IHC, immunohistochemistry; LIPA, left inferior parathyroid adenoma; LPA, left parathyroid adenoma; LSPA: left superior parathyroid adenoma; NA, not available; RIPA, right inferior parathyroid adenoma; RSPA, right superior parathyroid adenoma.
PTH measured in Eq/mL.
Index case.