Ectopic sphenoid sinus pituitary adenoma masquerading as metastatic head and neck cancer.
Augustine ChaiAlvin Yong Quan SoonManish Mahadeorao BundeleJian Li TanPublished in: BMJ case reports (2021)
A 68-year-old Chinese man was found to have a lobular mass in the sphenoid sinus which extended to the clivus and the roof of the nasopharynx on a staging MRI scan performed for his high-grade parotid salivary duct carcinoma. Further positron emission tomography scan showed that this lesion was fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) avid. This proved to be a diagnostic dilemma. The patient underwent a total parotidectomy, left selective neck dissection and a transphenoidal biopsy of his nasal lesion. Final histology revealed that this lesion was a synchronous ectopic sphenoid sinus pituitary adenoma (ESSPA). Initial differential diagnoses that were considered included a chordoma, metastatic carcinoma and nasopharyngeal carcinoma. However, an important differential with a neoplastic appearance and a tendency for positive FDG uptake is an ESSPA. It requires dedicated immunohistochemical staining to diagnose, and its mainstay of treatment is surgical excision.
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