Case Report

Cutaneous Metastasis of Medullary Carcinoma Thyroid Masquerading as Subcutaneous Nodules Anterior Chest and Mandibular Region

Table 1

Medullary carcinoma thyroid: an overview.

Clinical examination
(i) Incidence
 3.0% of all thyroid cancers
(ii) Age at presentation
 5th and 6th decade
(iii) Clinical presentation at diagnosis
  (a) Cervical swelling (cervical lymphadenopathy) with midline neck swelling
  (b) Hoarseness, dysphagia, and stridor
  (c) Paraneoplastic syndromes (uncommon)
  (d) Diarrhoea
(iv) Propensity for regional and distant metastasis
  (a) Cervical Lymphadenopathy present in 50% cases at the time of diagnosis
  (b) Liver, lung, and bone metastasis by hematogenous route in 5–10% cases at the time of diagnosis

Diagnostic options
(i) Cytology
(ii) Histopathology followed by immunohistochemical stains
(iii) Serum calcitonin and CEA levels
(iv) 24 hours urinalysis for catecholamine metabolites to rule out asso MEN 2 syndrome
(v) Radiological assessment
  (a) Whole body CT scan
  (b) Ultrasonography of neck and abdomen
(vi) Screening for missense mutation in RET in leucocytes

Management options
(i) Surgery
  (a) Total thyroidectomy with or without neck dissection
  (b) Prophylactic thyroidectomy in carriers
(ii) Radiotherapy (adjuvant)
(iii) Chemotherapy (palliative in advanced cases)
(iv) Newer modalities (tyrosine kinase inhibitors)
  (a) Vandetanib
  (b) Cabozantinib