| Literature DB >> 36004344 |
Shejil Kumar1, Cun An Phang1, Huajing Ni1, Terrence Diamond1.
Abstract
Ectopic thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH)oma located outside the sella turcica is exceedingly rare and can be associated with significant diagnostic delay. The clinical presentation depends on the anatomical location and size of the ectopic tumor and the degree of thyrotoxicosis. A 71-year-old woman presented with goiter and thyrotoxicosis. Initial investigations revealed elevated free thyroxine (fT4) and tri-iodothyronine (fT3) with inappropriately high-normal TSH. Assay interference was unlikely, pituitary magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan was reported as "normal," and germline sequencing was negative for thyroid hormone receptor ß pathogenic variants. One year later, total thyroidectomy for enlarging symptomatic goiter and suspicious nodule revealed multifocal microscopic papillary thyroid carcinoma. Six years later, she presented to an ear, nose, and throat surgeon with nasal congestion, and a sphenoid bone mass was discovered on nasoendoscopy and imaging. Ectopic TSHoma was confirmed on surgical resection, and a review of the initial pituitary MRI scan revealed the mass which had initially been missed. This is the first reported case of an ectopic TSHoma located in the sphenoid bone. Ectopic TSHoma should be considered in patients with inappropriate TSH secretion when more common differentials are excluded including thyroid hormone resistance or pituitary TSHoma.Entities:
Keywords: TSHoma; ectopic TSHoma; ectopic thyrotropin (TSH) secreting pituitary adenoma; thyroid-stimulating hormone; thyrotoxicosis; thyrotropinoma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36004344 PMCID: PMC9393506 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2022.961256
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 6.055
Figure 1Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans of the head demonstrating midline sphenoid bone mass. T1-weighted (FLAIR) sagittal view pituitary magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan performed in 2021 (A) demonstrating normal pituitary gland (short arrow) and adjacent midline T1-hypointense 3.0 cm × 2.3 cm × 2.3 cm mass (long arrow) located within the sphenoid bone extending to the clival, sphenoid sinus, and nasopharyngeal surfaces of the sphenoid bone with no extension into the sphenoid sinus or nasopharynx. Retrospective review of the T1-weighted sagittal view initial pituitary MRI scan performed in 2014 (B) demonstrated the same lesion within the sphenoid bone measuring 2.2 cm × 2.1 cm × 2.3 cm. Arrows are not included in (B) so the image is unperturbed and seen in the same way the radiologist viewed the scan.
Figure 2Histopathological confirmation of ectopic TSHoma. Histopathology (obtained from tumor resection) with hematoxylin and eosin staining (A) showing small irregularly shaped islands of cells separated by fibrovascular stroma beside the bone (dark purple streak). Cells have small amounts of lightly eosinophilic, granular cytoplasm and small–intermediate-sized round nuclei with no mitoses identified. Strong diffuse positive tumor cell staining on immunohistochemistry for TSH is also seen (B).
Summary of the 14 published cases to-date of ectopic TSHoma.
| Author Year | Age Sex | Presentation | Initial investigations | Initial diagnosis | Initial treatment | Delay to diagnosis | LocationSize | Post-resection outcome and follow-up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kumar et al. | 71 years | Intermittent dysphagia | Elevated fT4 | Inappropriate TSH secretion | Total thyroidectomy for progressive goiter/suspicious nodule | 7 years | Sphenoid bone/clivus | TFTs normalized at 5 months |
| Li et al. | 10 years | Sweats, heat intolerance | Elevated fT4 | Ectopic TSHoma | Surgical resection of the suprasellar mass | <1 year | Suprasellar | Normalization of fT3, fT4, and TSH. Resolution of symptoms and no recurrence at 4 years |
| Ortiz et al. | 52 years | Weight loss, hyperdefecation | Elevated fT4 | Primary hypothyroidism | Thyroxine | 2 years | Sphenoid sinus | Initial recurrence requiring reoperation |
| Trummer et al. | 48 years | Palpitations, sweats | Elevated fT4 | Inappropriate TSH secretion | Propylthiouracil | 1 year | Nasopharynx | TFTs normalized |
| Kim et al. | 48 years | Palpitations, tremor, tachycardia | Elevated fT4 | Primary thyrotoxicosis | Methimazole | 4 years | Nasopharynx | TFTs normalized |
| Hanaoka et al. | 41 years | Visual impairment | NR | Craniopharyngioma | Surgical resection of the suprasellar mass | <1 year | Suprasellar | Normal TFTs and no structural recurrence at 7 years |
| Yang et al. | 27 years | Palpitations | Elevated fT4 | Primary thyrotoxicosis | Methimazole | 10 years | Nasopharynx | TFTs normalized |
| Wang et al. | 46 years | Palpitations, sweats, weight loss | Elevated fT4 | Primary thyrotoxicosis | Propylthiouracil | 1 year | Suprasellar | TFTs normalized |
| Song et al. | 41 years | Palpitations, weight loss, atrial fibrillation | Elevated fT4 | Primary thyrotoxicosis | Propylthiouracil | <1 year | Nasopharynx | TFTs normalized |
| Nishiike et al. | 46 years | Sweats, palpitations | Elevated fT4 | Inappropriate TSH secretion | Surgical resection of the nasopharyngeal mass | 3 years | Nasopharynx | TSH normalized |
| Tong et al. | 49 years | Nasal congestion | Elevated fT4 | Sinusitis | Methimazole | <1 year | Nasopharynx | Recurrence-free at 3-month follow-up |
| Collie et al. | 50 years | Headaches, nasal congestion | Non-suppressible TSH | Peripheral nerve sheath tumor | Surgical resection of the nasopharyngeal mass | NR | Nasopharynx | TSH normalized |
| Pasquini et al. | 52 years | Sweats, palpitations, weight loss, atrial fibrillation | Elevated fT4 | Grave’s disease | Methimazole | 18 years | Nasopharynx | TFTs normalized initially |
| Cooper et al. | 74 years | Anxiety, tremors, weight loss | High-normal fT4 | Grave’s disease | Propylthiouracil | 9 years | Nasopharynx | TFTs normalized |
fT4, free thyroxine; fT3, free tri-iodothyronine; TSH, thyroid-stimulating hormone; THR, thyroid hormone receptor; TRH, thyrotropin-releasing hormone; SHBG, sex hormone-binding globulin; NR, not recorded; TFT, thyroid function tests.
Clinical, biochemical, and radiological characteristics of pituitary and ectopic TSHoma.
| Pituitary TSHoma | Ectopic TSHoma | |
|---|---|---|
|
| Hyperthyroidism, goiter | Hyperthyroidism, goiter |
|
| Pituitary | Nasopharynx/suprasellar/sphenoid |
|
| Macro > micro | Macro > micro |
|
| High FT4, high FT3, normal/high TSH | High FT4, high FT3, normal/high TSH |
|
| Increased/normal | Increased/normal |
|
| Increased/normal | Increased/normal |
|
| Positive | Positive |
|
| Pituitary adenoma | Normal pituitary |
|
| <60% cure rate with macroadenoma | 93% cure rate |
TSH, thyroid-stimulating hormone; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; fT4, free thyroxine; fT3, free tri-iodothyronine; ENT, ear nose & throat.
| February 2008 | First biochemical evidence of TSH hypersecretion |
| March 2014 | Endocrinology institution referral |
| October 2014 | Initial pituitary MRI scan reported as “normal” |
| June 2015 | Total thyroidectomy for obstructive goiter and suspicious thyroid nodule |
| August 2021 | Ear, nose, and throat surgeon referral for investigation of nasal congestion |
| September 2021 | MRI head scan identified sphenoid bone mass |
| October 2021 | Resection of sphenoid bone mass and confirmation of the diagnosis of ectopic TSHoma |