Abstract

IntroductionPapillary thyroid cancer (PTC) is the commonest form of well-differentiated endocrine carcinoma. It is categorized into indolent and aggressive, where the indolent subtypes (classic, follicular) rarely demonstrate aggressive behavior. We present a classic PTC presenting with a rapidly growing huge anterior neck mass that subsequently spontaneously ruptured subcutaneously resulting in ischemia, necrosis, and perforation of overlying skin leading to inflammation.Presentation of caseA 37-year-old female with no comorbidities presented to our emergency department with a neck swelling of 2 years duration that rapidly enlarged one week prior to presentation. Though the mass initially appeared of inflammatory nature, the tumor was a PTC, and she underwent total thyroidectomy with selective right side neck dissection and debridement of necrotic skin. The gross specimen revealed a fragmented non-intact right thyroid lobe mass causing pressure ischemia, necrosis and perforation of the skin. Histopathology showed a 9 × 9 × 5 cm classic PTC staged as pT3b N1b. Postoperative course was uneventful, she was discharged by the eighth postoperative day, and then she received a high dose of radioactive iodine ablation (RAI).DiscussionClassic PTC is usually of a smaller size and a relatively benign course compared to other PTC subtypes and thyroid cancers. It is indolent with favorable prognosis. Although it is associated with increased risk of lymph node metastases at the time of diagnosis, it is slow growing with high survival rates approaching 95%.ConclusionDespite that classic PTC progresses slowly, it should still be suspected in neck swellings presenting with rapid and aggressive behavior. Prompt and systematic assessment is required with surgical intervention and radioactive iodine ablation therapy.

Highlights

  • Papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) is the commonest form of well-differentiated endocrine carcinoma

  • We present a classic PTC presenting with a rapidly growing huge anterior neck mass that subsequently spontaneously ruptured subcutaneously resulting in ischemia, necrosis, and perforation of over­ lying skin leading to inflammation

  • We present the first case of huge classic PTC with spontaneous sub­ cutaneous rupture causing ischemia, necrosis, and perforation of over­ lying skin leading to inflammation, presenting with pain and tenderness

Read more

Summary

Background

Papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) is the most common form of thyroid cancer, globally increasing in incidence with a presumption to soon become the third most common cancer in females [1,2]. PTC mainly manifests as a neck mass and thyroid nodule, with common locoregional metastasis to the surrounding lymph nodes of the neck, but rarely with distant metastasis [4,5]. New histopathologic variants of PTC have been classified into indolent (classical, follicular, macrofollicular) and aggressive (hobnail, tall cell, columnar cell, clear cell, solid, diffuse sclerosing) categories [6]. We report a classic PTC presenting as a huge anterior neck mass (9 cm long axis) that subsequently spontaneously ruptured subcutane­ ously resulting in ischemia, necrosis, and perforation of overlying skin and leading to inflammation of the anterior region of the neck. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of a large sized, predomi­ nantly solid, classic PTC that subsequently spontaneously ruptured subcutaneously resulting in ischemia, necrosis, perforation of the over­ lying skin and secondary inflammation. In addi­ tion, we conducted a literature review of large fast-growing PTCs

Case presentation
Investigations
Chest X-ray
Cytopathology
Surgical technique and findings
Pathology
Follow-up
Discussion
Findings
Conclusion
Ethical approval
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call