# Psammoma bodies in a benign thyroid gland: A case report and brief review of the literature

**Authors:** Ari M. Abdullah, Hadeel A. Yasseen, Rawa M. Ali, Shaho F. Ahmed, Abdulwahid M. Salih, Imad J. Habibullah, Twana Omer Saeed, Shko H. Hassan, Harun Amanj Ahmed, Fahmi H. Kakamad

PMC · DOI: 10.3892/mi.2025.282 · Medicine International · 2025-10-29

## TL;DR

This case report describes psammoma bodies found in a benign thyroid gland, highlighting the importance of histopathological evaluation to avoid misdiagnosis.

## Contribution

The paper presents a rare case of psammoma bodies in a benign thyroid and reviews existing literature on similar cases.

## Key findings

- Psammoma bodies were found in a benign thyroid gland with no malignancy.
- Four cases of psammoma bodies in benign conditions were identified in the literature review.
- Histological analysis confirmed psammomatous calcifications in all reviewed cases with favorable outcomes.

## Abstract

Psammoma bodies (PBs) are round, layered calcified structures usually associated with papillary thyroid cancer and may be observed in 40-50% of cases, but may rarely occur in benign thyroid disease. The present study describes a rare case of PBs being found in a benign thyroid gland. In addition, a brief review of the literature is presented. A 28-year-old female patient presented with a 3-month history of weight loss, poor appetite and generalized weakness. Her thyroid was firm and mildly enlarged. Thyroid function was within normal limits (thyroid-stimulating hormone, 0.85 µIU/ml; free T4, 20.1 pmol/l; thyroglobulin, 6.15 ng/ml). An ultrasound demonstrated bilateral TI-RADS-3 nodules measuring 25x21x19 mm (right) and 17x15x13 mm (left). A total thyroidectomy revealed thyroid follicular nodular disease with focal lymphocytic thyroiditis and PBs, but no malignancy. In the literature, 4 cases of PBs or psammomatous calcifications linked to benign conditions were identified, 2 males and 2 females. Half of the cases involved the thyroid-region lesions and half were pediatric (2/4). All cases underwent surgical excision, and fine-needle aspiration was diagnostic in only 1 case (25%). A computed tomography scan was used in 2 cases (50%). A histological analysis confirmed PBs or psammomatous calcifications in every case, and all patients had favorable outcomes with no recurrence upon follow-up. When PBs are detected without tumor cells, submitting the entire thyroid tissue for histology is recommended to rule out microscopic carcinoma. PBs can arise in benign thyroid follicular nodular disease, mimicking malignancy on imaging and cytology, accurate diagnosis requires comprehensive histopathological evaluation.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** lymphocytic thyroiditis (MONDO:0005623)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** TG (thyroglobulin) [NCBI Gene 7038] {aka AITD3, TGN}
- **Diseases:** TI-RADS-3 (MESH:C537153), weakness (MESH:D018908), papillary thyroid cancer (MESH:D000077273), carcinoma (MESH:D009369), Psammoma bodies (MESH:D001835), benign thyroid disease (MESH:D013959), benign thyroid gland (MESH:D013966), benign thyroid follicular nodular disease (MESH:D018263), lymphocytic thyroiditis (MESH:D013967), weight loss (MESH:D015431)
- **Chemicals:** T4 (MESH:D013974)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

15 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12598533/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12598533