| Literature DB >> 35174786 |
Francesca Orsolini1, Alessandro Prete1, Pierpaolo Falcetta1, Domenico Canale1, Fulvio Basolo2, Greta Alì2, Francesca Manassero3, Paolo Vitti1, Rossella Elisei1, Eleonora Molinaro1.
Abstract
Introduction: Medullary thyroid cancer (MTC) is a rare endocrine tumor, which can be sporadic or familial, as a component of multiple endocrine neoplasia 2 (MEN2). Overall, 10% of MTC cases have already developed at presentation or will develop metastasis during follow-up. Testicular metastases are exceptional and only one case of unilateral testis involvement by metastatic MTC has been already reported in literature. We described the first known case of asymptomatic bilateral testicular MTC metastases, discovered incidentally at testicular ultrasound (US) performed for unrelated reasons. Case presentation: A Latin American 32-year-old man with MEN 2A syndrome and metastatic MTC underwent andrological and urological examination due to premature ejaculation. US imaging showed two symmetrical hypoechoic lesions involving both testes. Suspecting a bilateral testicular cancer, the patient underwent excision biopsy of both testicular lesions. Histopathology and immunohistochemical examinations documented metastatic MTC of both testicular lesions.Entities:
Keywords: medullary thyroid cancer; multiple endocrine neoplasia 2A syndrome; testicular metastases
Year: 2022 PMID: 35174786 PMCID: PMC8963169 DOI: 10.1530/ETJ-21-0016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Thyroid J ISSN: 2235-0640
Medullary thyroid markers before and after enucleoresection of the testicular lesions.
| Markers | Before surgery | 4 days after surgery | 2 months after surgery | Normal values |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CTN (ng/L) | 18,889 | 9045 | 18,024 | <11.5 |
| CEA (µg/L) | 167.9 | 144.1 | 161.8 | <5.2 |
Figure 1Ultrasound imaging. Hypoechoic lesion of 5 mm in the middle part of the right testis, without a clear vascular pattern.
Figure 2Immunohistochemical examinations. Hematoxylin–eosin coloring (A and B). Tumor cells show positivity for CTN (C), CD56 (D) chromogranin A (E).