Thyroid Paraganglioma: Our Experience and Systematic Review of the Literature on a Rare Tumor

We describe 2 cases of thyroid PG, suggest a possible diagnostic and therapeutic management strategy, and present a systematic review of the literature. Case Reports: Two 67-year-old women presented similarly with asymptomatic but rapidly growing thyroid nodules in which malignancy was suspected after fine needle aspiration biopsy, “THY 4” according to the 2014 SIAPEC classification, both undergoing total thyroidectomy. Unexpectedly, immunohistochemistry showed neuroendocrine cellular architecture that was negative for common markers of well-differentiated follicular neoplasms, thyroglobulin, thyroid transcription factor 1, cytokeratins and medullary thyroid cancer, calcitonin, carcinoembryonic antigen, whereas neuron-specific enolase, synaptophysin, chromogranin A, and S-100 protein were highly expressed, confirming the diagnosis of primary thyroid PG. The patients were both discharged on postoperative day 2, without any other therapy and are currently well without evidence of local recurrence of metastatic disease, after 4 years and 3 months of follow-up, respectively. Discussion: These are the only 2 cases of thyroid PG experienced in our center which specializes in thyroid surgery. Thyroid PG is a rare neuroendocrine neoplasm first described by Van Miert in 1964 with just over 50 cases reported in the literature. Our experience is concordant with the literature that the diagnosis of the primary PG of the thyroid is challenging, due to its low prevalence and the ...
Source: American Journal of Clinical Oncology - Category: Cancer & Oncology Tags: Original Articles: Endocrine Source Type: research