Abstract

Primary squamous cell carcinoma of the thyroid (SCC-T) is extremely rare. Its clinical presentation is similar to that of anaplastic carcinoma. Metastasis or extension from the head and neck area should be ruled out, as patients with SCC-T have a poorer prognosis than patients who have a thyroid extension from an adjacent tumor. An 87-year-old man presented with a longstanding painless mass in the right thyroid and had experienced 2 months of pain upon swallowing. A right lobectomy was performed with resection of thyroid cartilage, cricoid cartilage, a portion of the first to third tracheal ring and the right neck lymph node. A histological examination revealed pure SCC. The tumor cells showed diffuse immunoreactivity to CK5/6, CK19 and p63. Immunoreactivity to EMA and p53 was focally positive. TTF-1, galectin 3 and thyroglobulin immunoreactivity was restricted to the non-neoplastic thyroid tissue. Both tumor cells and non-neoplastic follicular cells were negative for CD5. The MIB-1 index was 36%. DNA extracted from the tumor identified a BRAF V600E mutation in exon 15 and a BRAF G468A mutation in exon 11, whereas DNA from non-tumorous cells did not contain a mutation. These molecular findings may suggest a direct transformation from papillary carcinoma to SCC-T.

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