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- Title
Normal Preoperative Calcitonin Levels Do Not Always Exclude Medullary Thyroid Carcinoma in Patients with Large Palpable Thyroid Masses.
- Authors
Redding, Allen H.; Levine, Steven N.; Fowler, Marjorie R.
- Abstract
Medullary thyroid carcinoma (MCT) is a sporadic or familial tumor of the parafollicular or C-cells that secretes calcitonin. The sporadic form usually presents with a palpable thyroid nodule or cervical adenopathy, by which time basal calcitonin levels are almost always elevated. Without special stains, fine-needle biopsy may fail to detect MCT. Recently, several investigators have recommended routine measurement of serum calcitonin in patients with nodular thyroid diseases for the preoperative diagnosis of MCT. A 31-year-old woman had a large palpable MCT with normal calcitonin and carcinoembryonic antigen levels before surgery. Fine-needle aspiration (FNA) demonstrated atypical cells but was not diagnostic of MCT. Pathology revealed a 3 × 4.5 × 2.3 cm MCT. Immunochemical stains showed immunoreactivity for calcitonin and synaptophysin, but no immunoreactivity to thyroglobulin. Postoperative basal and pentagastrin-stimulated calcitonin levels have remained undetectable without evidence of recurrent cancer. We have evaluated six other patients with MCT that were palpable. They had preoperative calcitonin levels ranging from 322-50,032 pmol/L. This unique case of a woman with a 4.5-cm MCT and normal preoperative calcitonin levels, emphasizes the need for careful clinical evaluation and FNA biopsy in managing patients with nodular thyroid disease.
- Publication
Thyroid, 2000, Vol 10, Issue 10, p919
- ISSN
1050-7256
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1089/thy.2000.10.919