Lymph node, Metastatic papillary thyroid carcinoma

Details
Disease Category
Gender
Age
69 years
Organ System/Discipline
Diagnosis
Metastatic papillary thyroid carcinoma
Clinical History

FNA cervical lymph node.

Case Discussion

Papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) is the most common thyroid malignancy. The peak onset age is between 20 to 50 years old and it tends to affect women more than men (3-4:1). Clinically, it manifests as a solitary solid nodule. Cervical lymph node involvement is present in more than 50% of the cases; however, this does not seem to affect prognosis and the overall survival is close to 100%.

Grossly, the lesions can be well encapsulated or infiltrative with a solid white appearance and variable cystic degeneration and/or calcifications. Histologically (and cytologically), they are defined on the basis of their nuclear features which include: enlargement, crowding/overlapping, nuclear membrane thickening and irregularities/grooves, powdery chromatin, and pseudoinclusions (secondary to invagination of the cytoplasm in the nucleus). Psammoma bodies can be seen but are not specific. True papillary structures (tumour cells arranged around a fibrovascular core) are only present in the classic variant of PTC.

Image Contributors
Starova, B., Latta, E.

Cite

Starova, B., Latta, E. Lymph node, Metastatic papillary thyroid carcinoma. Digital Laboratory Medicine Library, Dept of Laboratory Medicine & Pathobiology, University of Toronto. Published . Accessed December 17, 2025. https://dev.dlml.cflabs.ca/image/lymph-node-metastatic-papillary-thyroid-carcinoma-lmp77124