| Literature DB >> 33682680 |
Viktoria F Koehler1, Patrick Keller2, Elisa Waldmann1, Nathalie Schwenk1, Carolin Kitzberger1, Kathrin A Schmohl1, Thomas Knösel3, Christian Georg Stief2, Christine Spitzweg1,4.
Abstract
SUMMARY: Struma ovarii is a teratoma of the ovaries predominantly composed of thyroid tissue. Hyperthyroidism associated with struma ovarii is rare, occurring in approximately 8% of cases. Due to the rarity of struma ovarii, available data are limited to case reports and small case series.We report on a 61-year-old female patient with known Hashimoto's thyroiditis on levothyroxine replacement therapy for years with transition to clinical and biochemical hyperthyroidism despite antithyroid medication with carbimazole (10 mg/day), new diagnosis of urothelial carcinoma and an adnexal mass suspicious of ovarian cancer. The patient underwent resection of the adnexal mass and histopathology revealed a mature teratoma predominantly composed of thyroid tissue showing high levels of sodium iodide symporter protein expression. Following struma ovarii resection and disappearance of autonomous production of thyroid hormones, the patient developed hypothyroidism with severely decreased thyroid hormone levels fT4 and fT3 (fT4 0.4 ng/dL, reference interval 0.9-1.7 and fT3 < 1.0 pg/mL, reference interval 2.0-4.4). This has previously been masked by continued thyroid-stimulating hormone suppression due to long-term hyperthyroidism pre-surgery indicating secondary hypothyroidism, in addition to primary hypothyroidism based on the known co-existing chronic lymphocytic thyroiditis of the orthotopic thyroid gland. Levothyroxine administration was started immediately restoring euthyroidism.This case illustrates possible diagnostic pitfalls in a patient with two concurrent causes of abnormal thyroid function. LEARNING POINTS: Struma ovarii is an ovarian tumor containing either entirely or predominantly thyroid tissue and accounts for approximately 5% of all ovarian teratomas. In rare cases, both benign and malignant struma ovarii can secrete thyroid hormones, causing clinical and biochemical features of hyperthyroidism. Biochemical features of patients with struma ovarii and hyperthyroidism are similar to those of patients with primary hyperthyroidism. In such cases, thyroid scintigraphy should reveal low or absent radioiodine uptake in the thyroid gland, but the presence of radioiodine uptake in the pelvis in a whole body radioiodine scintigraphy. We give advice on possible diagnostic pitfalls in a case with two simultaneous causes of abnormal thyroid function due to the co-existence of struma ovarii.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33682680 PMCID: PMC7983514 DOI: 10.1530/EDM-20-0142
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Endocrinol Diabetes Metab Case Rep ISSN: 2052-0573
Figure 1Pelvic MRI. The sagittal T2-weighted image revealed a large high-intensity cystic mass of the right ovary with a diameter of 15 cm.
Figure 2A sonogram of the right lobe of the thyroid ((A) transverse scan view, (B) longitudinal scan view) shows an inhomogeneous echotexture with hypoechoic areas compatible with chronic lymphocytic thyroiditis.
Figure 3High NIS protein expression in teratoma. NIS-specific immunoreactivity (red) was detected in thyroid follicular cells in the teratoma tissue. The image is shown at ×40 magnification and ×60 magnification.