# Isolated Abducens Nerve Palsy as the Sentinel Sign of Clival Metastasis in High-Grade Neuroendocrine Carcinoma: A Case Report

**Authors:** Mehdi Mounir, Kaye Ndi Paola, Ilias Bennouna, Philomene Lavis, Anais Eskenazi

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.82445 · 2025-04-17

## TL;DR

A rare case of clival metastasis from a high-grade neuroendocrine carcinoma is reported, presenting with abducens nerve palsy and highlighting the importance of neuroimaging in atypical neurological presentations.

## Contribution

This is the first reported case of clival metastasis from high-grade neuroendocrine carcinoma, emphasizing its aggressiveness and diagnostic challenges.

## Key findings

- Clival metastasis from high-grade NEC presented as isolated abducens nerve palsy.
- Clival involvement was undetectable on prior imaging and emerged after systemic therapy.
- Palliative radiotherapy and corticosteroids provided limited clinical benefit in this case.

## Abstract

We report a rare case of clival metastasis from a high-grade neuroendocrine carcinoma (NEC) of unknown primary origin. A 71-year-old man, previously cured of prostate adenocarcinoma, presented with abdominal pain leading to the diagnosis of metastatic NEC (Ki67 >90%) involving the liver and bones. After three lines of chemotherapy and immunotherapy, he developed sudden diplopia and right abducens nerve palsy. A brain contrast-enhanced MRI revealed a clival mass compressing the sixth cranial nerve, which was undetectable on prior imaging. The patient received palliative radiotherapy and corticosteroids without a significant clinical response. While neuroendocrine neoplasms (NENs) frequently metastasize to visceral organs, clival involvement is exceptionally rare, particularly as a delayed complication. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of NEC with clival metastasis, emphasizing the tumor’s aggressiveness. This case underscores the critical role of advanced neuroimaging in detecting atypical presentations in patients with new neurological deficits, even under systemic therapy, and highlights the challenges of managing skull base metastases in aggressive malignancies. Radiotherapy may stabilize symptoms, but functional recovery remains limited in cases of prolonged nerve compression.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** prostate adenocarcinoma (MONDO:0005082), neuroendocrine carcinoma (MONDO:0002120), abducens nerve palsy (MONDO:0007033)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** abdominal pain (MESH:D015746), Metastasis (MESH:D009362), diplopia (MESH:D004172), prostate adenocarcinoma (MESH:D000230), nerve compression (MESH:D009408), NEC (MESH:D018278), neurological deficits (MESH:D009461), base (MESH:D019292), NENs (MESH:D009369), Abducens Nerve Palsy (MESH:D020434)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12005234/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12005234