International Journal of Case Reports and Images (IJCRI) is an international, peer reviewed, monthly, open access, online journal, publishing high-quality, articles in all areas of basic medical sciences and clinical specialties.Aim of IJCRI is to encourage the publication of new information by providing a platform for reporting of unique, unusual and rare cases which enhance understanding of disease process, its diagnosis, management and clinico-pathologic correlations. Figure 1A), in particular from the oral cavity to pyriform sinus ( Figure 1B), in the subcutaneous tissues ( Figure 1C), on bone, pancreas ( Figure 1D) and a moderate uptake on the right upper lung lobe probably corresponding to a pleomorphic PSC recurrence ( Figure 1E, 1F). Thus these findings have suggested a distant metastatic relapse of the PSC associated with a loco-regional recurrence of OSCC. Surprisingly, histological analysis of subcutaneous biopsies ( Figure 1G) concluded a well-differentiated SCC and immunostaining for thyroid transcription factor-1 (TTF-1) was negative.
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DIsCUssIoNPulmonary sarcomatoid carcinoma is a rare, poorly differentiated subtype of non-small cell lung cancer accounting for 0.1-0.4% of all lung malignancies. They occur mostly in smoking males, at an average age of 60 years. With a high frequency of local recurrence and distant metastatio, they are responsible of an aggressive clinical course. Microscopically, this poor prognostic disease is the result of a biphasic proliferative malignant cells with both carcinoma and sarcomatoid components. Immunohistochemically, TTF-1, a specific marker of thyroid and pulmonary tumors such as adenocarcinoma and small cell carcinoma, is find to be positive in more than 50% of PSCs [1]. Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), as far as they are concerned, preferentially metastasise to cervical lymph nodes. They have an uncommon hematogenous spread varying from 4.2-23.8%, up to 57% at autopsies on the lungs (80%), mediastinal nodes (34%), bone (31%) and liver (31%). Distant metastatic clearly affect the prognosis of HNSCCs and if not present at initial presentation it usually becomes apparent within two years [2]. Even so their clinicopathological predictive factors of occurrence are the site of the primary tumor (oropharynx, hypopharynx and larynx), multilevel nodal involvement in neck and primary tumor invasion into muscular, bone or cartilage ; metastatic screening by 18 [F]-FDG PET/CT can detect them early, before the onset of medical complications [3]. Detection of occult disseminated disease without curative options allow avoiding all futile treatment, counseling patients about prognosis and optimizing their quality of life [4]. Cancer-related hypercalcemia is most common in patients with lung, breast, head and neck and kidney cancer. It could be related either to osteolysis of the severe bone metastases -that was probably the reason for this atypical patient-or a paraneoplastic syndrome. Having a strong correlation with the stage of the pr...