Herein, we report a case with occult FTC who presented with a pathological rib fracture. Although there are several known cases of FTC with distant metastasis, this is the first report of an initial presentation with a rib fracture due to a metastatic occult FTC.
Surgery with intraoperative frozen-section assessment was planned, as the patient was unable to tolerate the pleuritic chest pain, despite opioid analgesics treatment. A written informed consent was obtained, and he underwent surgery under general anesthesia. An intraoperative frozen-section was reported as malignant; therefore, the lesion was removed with partial resection of the third and fourth ribs, achieving tumor-free margins for local control. The chest wall was, then, reconstructed with polypropylene mesh to obtain the chest wall integrity. Pathological examination of the specimen was unexpectedly reported as a metastatic FTC (Figure 1).
Based on the pathological diagnosis, the patient was re-interviewed and questioned about thyroid disease; however, his medical history was unremarkable with normal thyroid findings on physical examination. Thyroid function tests and routine biochemical parameters were also normal. However, thyroid ultrasonography revealed a 5 mm hypoechoic mass with increased vascularity in the right lobe of the thyroid which was reported as a solitary nodule suspicious for thyroid cancer. A total thyroidectomy was performed 30 days after the rib resection. Histopathological examination of the thyroidectomy specimen confirmed the diagnosis of a FTC (Figure 1). Following thyroid surgery, the patient underwent radioiodine therapy, followed by thyrotropin-suppressive therapy. The patient is still free from recurrence or distant metastasis over more than two years of follow-up.
Although there are several reported cases of FTCs with bone metastasis, the initial presentation with distant metastasis in patients with a FTC is rare.[4,5] The incidence of distant metastasis as the initial presentation is highest in older patients aged above 45 years.[2] In our case, who was 51 years old, the initial finding of a FTC was only a pathological fracture of the fourth rib. Physical examination and medical history did not suggest thyroid disease, and imaging studies showed no other distant metastasis. In the preoperative evaluation, positron emission tomography-computed tomography is an essential requirement for scanning metastasis in such cases; however it is not available in our hospital setting and near region; therefore, we were unable to perform it. Additionally, preoperative histological evaluation via biopsy is also necessary in the management of such cases; however, the biopsy procedure was unable to be performed in our case, as he was intolerant to the pleuritic chest pain, despite opioid analgesics. As the radiological assessment of the lesion was reported as a localized primary malignant soft tissue tumor on the chest wall, we planned surgery with intraoperative frozen-section study. The histopathological examination revealed a malignant tumor, and the resection specimen was unexpectedly reported as metastatic FTC.
Furthermore, guidelines for metastatic FTCs include thyroidectomy, resection of the metastasis, whenever possible, for local control of the disease, and radioiodine therapy, followed by thyroid-stimulating hormone-suppressing therapy.[6] Accordingly, our case was treated with total thyroidectomy, after resecting the metastasis to the fourth rib, achieving tumor-free margins by including the third and fifth ribs. Following thyroid surgery, the patient underwent radioiodine therapy, followed by levothyroxine treatment. Shaha et al.[2] also reported that appropriate treatment led to satisfactory long-term survival in up to 43% of patients with metastatic thyroid cancer. In our case, no recurrence or distant metastasis was observed during more than two-year follow-up.
In conclusion, although several cases of FTCs with distant metastasis have been described to date, this is the first report of initial presentation with a rib fracture due to metastasis of an occult FTC. Although rare, therefore, distant metastasis of a FTC should be included in the differential diagnosis of pathological rib fracture.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect to
the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the research
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