| Literature DB >> 32765421 |
Tiziana Feola1,2, Giulia Puliani1, Franz Sesti1, Roberta Modica3, Marco Biffoni4, Cira Di Gioia5, Raffaella Carletti5, Emanuela Anastasi6, Valentina Di Vito1, Roberta Centello1, Andrea Lenzi1, Andrea M Isidori1, Antongiulio Faggiano1, Elisa Giannetta1.
Abstract
Introduction: Laryngeal neuroendocrine neoplasms (NENs) are a rare group of NENs of the neck, which commonly show immunostaining for calcitonin. Laryngeal NENs with calcitonin hypersecretion and lymph node metastases represent a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge, which should be included in the differential diagnosis of medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC). We report a complex case of laryngeal NEN with calcitonin hypersecretion and a review of the literature. Case Presentation: A 59-year-old man presented with dysphagia, dyspnea, and lateral cervical mass; he was a smoker. At first imaging, a laryngeal lesion with lateral cervical lymphadenopathies was found, and it resulted as a moderately differentiated neuroendocrine tumor (G2), Ki67 = 5%, positive for calcitonin. Increased levels of serum calcitonin (50 pg/ml) were found. The patient started somatostatin analogs for lesions positivity to somatostatin receptor-based imaging. After 5 months, the disease progressed at 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) PET-CT, and also new painful cutaneous lesions occurred. Considering high serum levels of calcitonin, differential diagnosis with MTC was required. Patient performed a thyroid color Doppler ultrasound, nodule fine needle aspiration, calcitonin dosage in fine needle washout fluid, and a calcium gluconate stimulation test. After multidisciplinary evaluation, we decided to perform a total thyroidectomy associated with lateral cervical lymphadenectomy and resection of skin metastases. No MTC was found. Two of the five resected lymph nodes, left upper parathyroid, and skin lesions were metastases of NEN G2, positive for calcitonin. After 2 months, new painful skin lesions occurred, and a target therapy with everolimus 10 mg/day was started. After 6 months of therapy, partial metabolic response with a reduction of 53.7% of radiotracer uptake at primary tumor was detected together with an improvement of patient's quality of life. Conclusions: The present case is the seventh described in the literature of laryngeal NEN associated with elevated serum calcitonin levels and the first case with parathyroid metastasis, suggesting the importance of a correct differential diagnosis between MTC and calcitonin-secreting laryngeal NEN, using an integrated approach of biochemistry and advanced imaging. This is also the first time that somatostatin analogs and then everolimus were used in this setting, resulting in clinical and partial metabolic response.Entities:
Keywords: calcium gluconate infusion test; everolimus; larynx; medullary thyroid carcinoma; neck; neuroendocrine tumor
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32765421 PMCID: PMC7378381 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2020.00397
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1(A) 68Ga-DOTATOC PET-CT (upper panel) and (B) 18F-FDG PET-CT (lower panel). (A) 68Ga-DOTATOC PET-CT showed accumulation of radiotracer in left epiglottic region; (B) 18F-FDG PET-CT showed uptake of the radiotracer in the left emilarynx lesion, SUV max 9.3, and in two laterocervical lymph nodes, SUV max 11.4 and 7.
Figure 2Thyroid and neck ultrasound. An irregular hypoechoic nodule (11 × 7 mm) with (A,B) calcifications in the paraisthmic portion of the left thyroid lobe and (C,E,F) multiple suspected lateral cervical rounded, hypoechoic, and inhomogeneous lymphadenopathies without ilum, showing an panel (D) unorganized peripheral and central vascularization.
Figure 3Metastasis of neuroendocrine tumor. The neoplasia infiltrating the connective tissue show a solid and only focal tubuloacinar arrangement of cells with moderate nuclear atypia. There is not any necrosis. (H&E, × 10). The immunohistochemical stains (× 10) show positivity of tumor cells for epithelial (CKAE1/AE3) and neuroendocrine markers (ChrA, Syn, and CD56) and a proliferative index Ki67 of 5%. The tumor cells are also positive for calcitonin and TTF-1. H&E, hematoxylin and eosin; CKAE1/AE3, pan cytokeratins AE1/AE3; ChrA, chromogranin A; Syn, synaptophysin; CD56, NCAM; TTF-1, thyroid transcription factor 1.
Summary of case reports of laryngeal neuroendocrine neoplasms (NENs) with elevated serum levels of calcitonin.
| Our case | 59, M | bCT: 50 pg/ml (<10 pg/ml), sCT: 56.6 pg/ml (10 min after calcium gluconate test) | Epiglottis, 2 cervical lymph nodes, skin | TT, lymph node dissection, skin metastases excision, OCT 30 mg/28 days and Everolimus 10 mg/day |
| ( | 57, M | bCT: 157 pg/ml (0–8 pg/ml) | Right arytenoid, 7 cervical lymph nodes, and thyroid | Total laryngectomy, bilateral neck dissection, and TT |
| ( | 57, M | bCT: 599 pg/ml (reference range NA) | Epiglottis, cervical lymph nodes, skin nodules in the right arm, bones | Supraglottic laryngectomy, neck dissection, CHT |
| ( | 58, M | bCT: 48.9 pg/ml (<10 pg/ml) | Right aryepiglottic fold, six subcutaneous pre-laryngeal nodules, inner lower quadrant of left breast | Aryepiglottic cartilage resection, subcutaneous nodules excision |
| ( | 69, M | bCT: 970 pg/ml (<300 pg/ml) | Right arytenoid | Partial laryngectomy, RT, subtotal T |
| ( | 55, M | bCT: 3,790 pg/l (<100 pg/l), sCT: 6,378 pg/ml (5 min after pentagastrin administration) | Epiglottis, three submandibular lymph nodes, skin, brain | RT, CHT, submandibular lymph node resection, left neck dissection, total laryngectomy, skin, and cerebral metastases excision |
| ( | 54, M | bCT: 1,200 ng/L (<200 ng/l), sCT: 1,500 ng/l (3 min after pentagastrin administration) | Left arytenoid, three cervical lymph nodes | Laryngothyroidectomy |
bCT, basal calcitonin level; sCT, stimulated calcitonin level; TT, total thyroidectomy; OCT, octreotide; T, thyroidectomy; CHT, chemotherapy; RT, radiotherapy.