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CASE REPORT |
Thyroid Study Unit, Department of Medicine, University of Chicago, 5841 S Maryland Ave, Mail Code 3090, Chicago, Illinois 60645, USA and 1 Department of Pathology, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA
(Correspondence should be addressed to R E Weiss; Email: rweiss{at}medicine.bsd.uchicago.edu)
Abstract
To our knowledge, only one case of a TSH-secreting carcinoma has previously been reported. We describe here a second patient with a pituitary carcinoma producing TSH and prolactin (PRL). A 37-year-old male underwent a left frontotemporal craniotomy in 1996 for a sellar mass. Except for mildly increased PRL and elevated
-subunit, hormone evaluation was normal. Pathologic examination revealed a chromophobe adenoma with increased mitotic forms. The patient completed a course of external beam radiation to the pituitary and was prescribed L-thyroxine, bromocriptine, and hydrocortisone. He was lost to follow-up but did well for 6 years, until 2002, when he presented with TSH-dependent thyrotoxicosis and hyperprolactinemia. The patient was started on bromocriptine and propylthiouracil and was, again, lost to follow-up. In 2004, 9 years after his initial presentation, he presented after falling. Magnetic resonance imaging showed two brain masses with associated midline shift. Emergent resection of the larger mass revealed a pituitary cancer with positive staining for PRL, but not for TSH. Nine months later, the patient underwent further debulking of metastatic disease. Although development of a carcinoma from a pituitary adenoma is very rare (<0.5%), macroadenomas that become hormonally active should be suspect for transformation into pituitary cancer.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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E. S. Mittra, R. D. Niederkohr, C. Rodriguez, T. El-Maghraby, and I. R. McDougall Uncommon Causes of Thyrotoxicosis J. Nucl. Med., February 1, 2008; 49(2): 265 - 278. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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