Abstract

Abstract Disclosure: M. Alashoor: None. J. Gogineni: None. A. Bakar: None. Introduction: Identifying and evaluating hyperfunctioning thyroid nodules in the setting of metastatic head and neck cancers represents a diagnostic challenge that may result in inaccurate identification of perithyroidal lymph node metastasis as malignant or metastatic thyroid nodules with standard workup. Case presentation: A 72-year-old male with a history of stage IV metastatic oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma, metastasized to the lymph nodes, lungs, mediastinum, and bilateral iliac bones. He was diagnosed two years ago and received chemotherapy, maintenance immunotherapy with pembrolizumab, and targeted palliative radiation therapy, with good clinical response. Restaging PET-CT two years later revealed local progression. During his workup, he was noted to have persistently abnormal thyroid function test with low TSH (0.03​​µIU/mL, n 0.3-5.33), normal free T4 (0.97ng/dL, n 0.60 - 1.40), mildly elevated free T3 (3.91pg/mL, n 2.5-3.9), negative thyrotropin receptor antibodies levels, negative TSI, negative TPO antibody, noted evidence of subclinical hyperthyroidism consistent over the past year. Radioactive iodine uptake demonstrated multinodular gland, mildly elevated 24-hour uptake of 28% consistent with hyperthyroidism, with decreased activity in the left lobe. Thyroid ultrasound revealed multiple probable malignant thyroid nodules, a 1.8 cm TI-RADS 5 lesion of the deep margin of the lower pole of the right lobe, and a 1.6 cm TI-RADS 5 lesion of the upper pole on the right lobe. He was treated with methimazole 5 mg. Further workup with fine needle aspiration demonstrated the right upper lobe nodule sample was positive for squamous cell carcinoma, findings suspicious for metastasis. He subsequently proceeded with radical tonsillectomy, right neck dissection, and right hemithyroidectomy. Surgical pathology results noted, right neck metastatic HPV-associated squamous cell carcinoma involving the lymph nodes with extranodal extension, right oropharyngeal HPV-mediated squamous cell carcinoma. The thyroid gland biopsy was significant for incidental papillary microcarcinoma 2mm, thyroid follicular nodular disease, without evidence of squamous cell carcinoma or metastatic infiltration. Post-hemithyroidectomy, his thyroid function normalized, and methimazole was discontinued. Conclusion: Thyroid metastasis from head and neck cancers represent a rare entity. In patients with a history of malignancy, evaluation of new thyroid masses remains crucial. While FNA is a sensitive method for detecting thyroid metastases, inaccuracies may occur, impacting the identification of thyroid nodules in the presence of local metastatic lymphadenopathy. Identifying squamous cell carcinoma in the thyroid can significantly influence the treatment plan of patients with metastatic carcinomas, therefore careful consideration must be undertaken on evaluation. Presentation: 6/1/2024

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