Abstract

IntroductionThe current study aims to report a rare case of metastatic papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) of the cervical lymph nodes with hobnail variant and anaplastic de-differentiation. In addition to the primary disease, there was a second pathology which was caseating granulomatous lymph adenitis suggestive of tuberculosis.Case reportA 91-year-old female presented with a painful right sided neck swelling for two weeks, increased in size suddenly. On clinical examination, there was a well-defined firm painful right sided neck mass. On ultrasound examination, there was multiple well defined solid hypoechoic, hypervascular nodules. These resembled lymph nodes of variable size and shape, mostly in the right side. The patient underwent right lateral cervical lymph node dissection. After the operation, she was sent for radiotherapy.DiscussionThe hobnail variant of PTC is genetically identical to poorly differentiated thyroid carcinoma in that its mutations are in the p53 and TERT promoters are more common in this variant than in conventional PTCs. The proportion of hobnail features have no effect on the outcome. Additionally, 10% of tumor cells with hobnail features were previously linked to a more aggressive clinicopathological aspect.ConclusionAlthough it is rare, metastatic PTC with hobnail variant could undergo anaplastic dedifferentiation.

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