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  • Immunohistochemistry differentiates papillary thyroid carcinoma arising in ectopic thyroid tissue from secondary lymph node metastases.

Immunohistochemistry differentiates papillary thyroid carcinoma arising in ectopic thyroid tissue from secondary lymph node metastases.

Thyroid : official journal of the American Thyroid Association (2007-08-19)
Daniela Cabibi, Matilde Cacciatore, Carla Guarnotta, Federico Aragona
ABSTRACT

To verify whether immunohistochemistry might be useful in the distinction between a true laterocervical metastasis of an undetected thyroid carcinoma and a primary tumor outside the gland. Galectin-3, cytokeratin 19, and HBME-1 were assessed in six cases (group A) of laterocervical masses harboring papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) but without a thyroid tumor, and in eight cases (group B) showing PTC both in the thyroid and in the laterocervical masses. In both groups, normal-looking follicles adjacent to the laterocervical neoplasia were present. We found that the apparently normal follicles in group A were negative for all the antibodies, while group B showed strong and diffuse positive immunostaining. The neoplastic areas were always positive for all the antibodies in both groups. Even if immunohistochemical patterns of residual follicles of group B are very well differentiated that they resemble normal thyroid parenchyma, they may well be metastatic carcinomas. On the contrary, the presence of morphologically and immunohistochemically normal-looking follicles in group A, with no intrathyroid tumor, suggests that the primary PTC might possibly develop in the ectopic thyroid tissue. In cases showing morphologically and immunohistochemically normal-looking follicles in laterocervical masses, these findings might lead to a reduction of the overdiagnosis of metastatic disease of an undetected carcinoma.