| Literature DB >> 33195392 |
Rui-Zhe Zheng1, Guo-Hui Huang2,3, Ying-Jie Xu1.
Abstract
Background: Primary squamous cell carcinoma of the thyroid (PSCCT) is an uncommon malignancy that is difficult to diagnose and differentiate. There is no consensus for the early clinical, radiological, or ultrasonic identification of PSCCT before pathological changes are observed in patients. There is also no suitable treatment due to the absence of a definite diagnosis. Case Presentation: A 76-year-old female patient complained about a rapidly growing cervical mass, dyspnea, dysphagia, and a change in her voice. Based on the results of thyroid ultrasound, fine-needle aspiration, and plain and enhanced CT, the patient was initially diagnosed with anaplastic thyroid carcinoma (ATC). Thereafter, we removed the mass that was the patient's main complaint. The gross examination of the patient's symptoms also supported our previous diagnosis. However, her disease was finally diagnosed as PSCCT, according to the histopathology and immunohistochemistry findings of the mass.Entities:
Keywords: anaplastic thyroid carcinoma; differential diagnosis; early identification; primary squamous cell carcinoma of the thyroid; treatment
Year: 2020 PMID: 33195392 PMCID: PMC7604291 DOI: 10.3389/fsurg.2020.590956
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Surg ISSN: 2296-875X
Figure 1A 76-year-old female with primary squamous cell carcinoma of the thyroid (PSCCT) in the left neck. (A) Low signal of grayscale ultrasound shows heterogeneously hypoechoic solid mass sized about 5 × 4 × 3 cm in her left thyroid gland accompanied with a 1.5 × 1.2-cm-size, well-defined, round-like microcalcification located in the central portion. (B) Preoperative fine-needle aspiration cytology of the mass shows no definite signs of malignancy. (C–E) CT scans show an annular calcification accompanied with a peripheral cystic degeneration portion in her left thyroid gland accompanied with the right deviation of trachea (axial, sagittal, and coronal planes). (F) Contrast-enhanced CT shows obvious heterogeneous enhancement with the central non-enhancing necrotic portion, and the thyroid capsule is intact. Chest CT suggested small nodules in the lower lobe of left lung (G) pulmonary window and (H) mediastinal window.
Figure 2Intraoperative findings and the gross specimens. (A) Endoscopic thyroidectomy shows the trachea deviated to the right and the recurrent laryngeal nerve was involved. (B) The gross specimen of the left thyroid mass is well-defined, with an approximate size of 5 × 3 × 2.5 cm and a 3 × 2 × 2 cm yellowish necrotic portion accompanied with calcification in the central portion.
Figure 3Histopathological findings. (A) Microscopy observed that nesting pattern with cornified pearl, keratin, and intercellular bridge (H&E, ×20). (B,C) Immunochemistry shows primary squamous cell carcinoma of the thyroid (PSCCT) cells positive for p63 and p40 (p63 and p40 immunostaining, ×20).
Differences between PSCCT and ATC.
| Etiology | (1) “Embryonic rest theory” | Direct transformation of a normal follicular cell to a completely undifferentiated cell |
| Clinical manifestation | A rapidly enlarging neck mass observed in older patients (60%), followed by symptoms of dyspnea, dysphagia, or hoarseness (20%) and change of voice (15%). | A rapidly enlarging thyroid mass ranging from 3 to 20 cm in size; the most frequent symptoms are hoarseness, dysphagia, dyspnea, stridor, and cervical pain |
| Features | (1) Rapidly enlarging mass | (1) Rapidly enlarging mass with the volume doubling within 1 week |
| US findings | Eggshell calcification and peripheral soft tissue or slowly growing, irregularly marinated hypoechoic solid nodule | Solid, marked hypoechogenicity, irregular margin and internal calcification |
| CT findings | A huge mass containing focal cystic changes, the course/curvilinear or eggshell calcification | A huge mass containing calcification and necrosis and had heterogeneous attenuation, accompanied with the metastasis of adjacent organs |
| IHC staining | Positive: TTF-1, PAX8, TG, p53, Ki-67 (30%), AE1/AE3, CK5/6, CK7 | Positive: p53, Ki-67, CK8, CK18, CK199, PAX8 (0–50%), GATA3 (50%), low-molecular-mass CK, calcitonin |
PSCCT, primary squamous cell carcinoma of the thyroid; ATC, anaplastic thyroid carcinoma; US, ultrasonographic; CT, computed tomography; IHC, immunohistochemistry.