Abstract

Thyroid cancers are generally rare and represent 1% of head and neck cancers. They count for 5.39% of thyroid tumors. Among them, differentiated carcinomas are the most common, including papillary and vesicular forms. However, there are other thyroid cancers that are very rare, one of them being thyroid adenocarcinoma, which in most cases is a metastasis of lungs, breasts, colon, rectum, prostate or renal cancers. The goal of our study is to report a rare case of primary adenocarcinoma of the thyroid gland and to describe the clinical, histological, and therapeutic aspects. A 42-year-old patient with a history of lobo-isthmectomy in December 2013 for a right thyroid nodule, in the ENT department of the Heinrich Lubke Hospital in Diourbel, whose immediate and early post-operative follow-up was uneventful came back in March 2015, 16 months later, with an anterolateral mass of the neck, at the level of previous surgical site. The mass was hard, measuring 5 cm in its greater axis. Para clinical explorations revealed a recurring tumor. Anatomo-pathological examination after surgical excision resulted in a primary adenocarcinoma of the thyroid gland. Adenocarcinoma is a cancer that rarely occurs in the thyroid gland. It is often a secondary metastasis from another organ. The primary adenocarcinoma in the thyroid makes for a very poor prognosis despite good management. Frequent recurrence or persistence of the tumor are often seen during post-operative follow up.

Highlights

  • Thyroid cancers are generally uncommon and only represent 1% of head and neck cancers [1]

  • In order of frequency, we have the medullary carcinoma and the anaplase carcinoma. It can be revealed as an incidentaloma that is an unsuspected thyroid lesion found on imaging study or while performing a surgery non-related to the thyroid gland [9]

  • Cesare P and al [11] found in their study 60% of papillary carcinoma and 7% of mixed papillary-follicular Carcinoma, 4% of anaplastic thyroid carcinoma and a reported 11% of remote Metastases of the thyroid gland, two of which resulting from an adenocarcinoma and one from a psoas Leiomyosarcoma

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Summary

Introduction

Thyroid cancers are generally uncommon and only represent 1% of head and neck cancers [1]. They count for 5.39% of thyroid tumors [2]. The usual primary cancers of the thyroid gland and the most described in order of frequency are papillary carcinomas, vesicular carcinomas, medullary carcinomas and anaplastic carcinomas. There are other thyroid cancers that are very rare among as the adenocarcinoma of the thyroid which is in most cases a metastasis of lung cancer, breast, colon, rectum, prostate or renal [4,5,6,7]. Primary adenocarcinoma of the thyroid is an exceptional form of thyroid cancer in the literature. We report a case by studying the clinical, histological and therapeutic aspects

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