| Literature DB >> 34277480 |
Davide Gigliano1,2,3, João Lobo1,2,3, Paula Lopes1,2, Ivo Julião4, Francisco Lobo5, Rosa Azevedo1, Rui Henrique1,2,3, Ângelo Rodrigues1,2,3.
Abstract
Merkel cell carcinoma is an aggressive malignancy that frequently recurs/disseminates, but metastases to the genitourinary tract are rare. Only eight cases of Merkel cell carcinoma metastatic to the testis are reported. We describe the ninth case of this event and provide a review of the literature. A 58-year-old man diagnosed with Merkel cell carcinoma of the wrist, presented, 37 months later, a recurrence in the form of a testicular metastasis. The tumor consisted of a monotonous proliferation of small, blue, round cells, with immunoexpression of neuroendocrine markers and the typical dot-like paranuclear immunostaining for cytokeratin 20, in the absence of immunostaining for cytokeratin 7. The patient is alive with no evidence of disease. Clinicians should be aware of the possibility of metastatic dissemination to the testis since genital examination/imaging is not part of routine follow-up for these patients, but timely orchiectomy may be curative. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: Carcinoma, Merkel cell; Neoplasm Metastasis; Neuroendocrine Tumors; Testis
Year: 2020 PMID: 34277480 PMCID: PMC8101657 DOI: 10.4322/acr.2020.198
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Autops Case Rep ISSN: 2236-1960
Figure 1Photomicrograph of the skin. A – The lesion had a solid growth pattern (H&E, 100X); B – It was diffusely positive for synaptophysin (100X); C – Ki67 index was high (100X); D – The tumor was present in the surgical margin (notice tumor cells present at the red-inked margin) (H&E 200X).
Figure 2Photomicrograph of the lymph node showing in A – metastatic infiltration (HE, 200X); B – positive reaction for CK 8/18 (40X).
Figure 3Macroscopic aspect (A) and histological overview (B) of the Merkel cell carcinoma within the testis. A – The lesion was solid, tan, with foci of hemorrhage and necrosis, and replaced almost the entire testicular parenchyma, sparing the mediastinum testis; B – The lesion was well demarcated and confined to the testicular parenchyma, sparing the rete and mediastinum testis. Vascular invasion was easily identifiable (white arrow).
Figure 4Photomicrographs of the tumor - Histological and immunohistochemistry studies of the testis’ Merkel cell carcinoma. A – The neoplasm had a solid, somewhat organoid growth pattern, and was composed of tumor cells with scant eosinophilic cytoplasm, hyperchromatic nuclei with coarsely granular chromatin and visible nucleoli. Numerous mitotic figures were evident (H&E,400X); B – Tumor cells disclosed strong and diffuse immunoexpression of synaptophysin (400X); C – multifocal and robust reaction to chromogranin (400X); D – strong and diffuse reaction to CK20 (400X).
Immunohistochemistry methods.
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| DAK-SYNAP | DAKO | 1/150 | BPRD kit | LB III |
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| DAK-A3 | DAKO | 1/200 | BPRD kit | LB III |
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| CD564 | LEICA | 1/100 | BPRD kit | LB III |
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| Ks20.8 | LEICA | 1/250 | BPRD kit | LB III |
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| OV-TL 12/30 | LEICA | 1/150 | BPRD kit | LB III |
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| 5D3 | LEICA | 1/100 | BPRD kit | LB III |
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| 2B11 & PD7/26 | DAKO | 1/300 | BPRD kit | LB III |
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| 8A9 | DAKO | 1/100 | BPRD kit | LB III |
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| C-10 | MASTER DIAGNÓSTICA | Prediluted | BPRD kit | LB III |
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| 8G7G3/1 | CELL MARQUE | 1/200 | BPRD kit | LB III |
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| Polyclonal | DAKO | 1/3000 | BPRD kit | LB III |
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| MIB-1 | DAKO | 1/200 | UUDD kit | Ventana |
BPRD kit: Bond Polymer Refine Detection Kit; LB III: Leica Bond III; UUDD kit: Ultraview Universal DAB Detection Kit.
Reported cases of Merkel cell carcinoma metastatic to the testis
| Author | Clinical feature | Age (y) | Side | Size (cm) | Primary MCC | Rx for primary MCC | Rx of testicular lesion | Time to metas (m) | Metas sites | Order of events | Follow-up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Present case | Testicular swelling | 61 | Left | 6 | Left wrist | Resection + LN dissection (positive) + RT + CT | O | 37 | LN | PR→O | ANED (47 months after primary tumor diagnosis) |
| Mweempwa et al. | Painless testicular swelling | 66 | Bilateral metach (3 M interval) | 7; 3 | U | N/A | O + CT | N/A | None | O →CT | ANED (26 months after second O) |
| Whitman et al. | Testicular mass | 70 | Right | 2.4 | Right gluteus | Resection + SLN biopsy (positive) + LN dissection (negative) | O | 15 | None | PR →O | ANED (6 months after O) |
| Tummala et al. | Testicular mass | 54 | Right | N/A | Left forearm | Resection + LN dissection (positive) + RT + CT | O | 2 | None | PR →O | ANED (36 months after O) |
| Schwindl et al. | Painful testicular swelling | 70 | Right | N/A | Right forearm | Resection + RT + LN dissection (positive) | O | 7 | LN | PR →O→Sg + CT | DFD (14 months after the primary tumor diagnosis) |
| Gleason et al. | Painless testicular mass | 53 | Left | 2.4 | Right gluteus | CT + RT | O | 22 | Shoulder, lung, mediastinum, LN | PR → meta→ RT → O → metas → palliative RT | DFD (12 months after O) |
| Rufini et al. | No testicular symptoms (detected by SRS) | 38 | Bilateral synch | N/A | U | N/A (received CT) | None | 2 | LN | Metastasis biopsy → CT → SRS (positive in testes) | DFD (8 months after primary tumor diagnosis) |
| Ro et al. | Painless enlargement | 73 | Right | 6 | Upper lip | Resection + RT + iridium implants | O + CT | 18 | LN, subcutaneous, liver | PR → meta | DFD (6 months after testicular metastasis) |
| Testicular swelling | 47 | Bilateral metach (2 m interval) | N/A | Left elbow | Resection + RT + CT | Bilateral O | 12 | No | PR → O | ANED (12 months after first testicular metastasis) |
ANED: alive with no evidence of disease; CT: chemotherapy; DFD: died from disease; LN: lymph node; M: months; meta: metastasis; MCC: Merkel cell carcinoma; metach: metachronous; NA: not available; O: orchiectomy; PR: primary tumor resection; RT: radiotherapy; Rx: treatment; Sg: surgery; SRS: somatostatin receptor scintigraphy; Synch: synchronous; U: unknown.