# Occult Pulmonary Micrometastases From a Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma Undetectable by Imaging

**Authors:** Risa Hashimoto, Yoshiro Otsuki, Toru Nakamura

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.103328 · Cureus · 2026-02-09

## TL;DR

A case shows that tiny thyroid cancer spread in the lungs can be missed by imaging, suggesting current methods may not detect all metastases.

## Contribution

Reports a rare case of occult pulmonary micrometastases from PTC undetectable by CT or RAI.

## Key findings

- Multiple tiny PTC metastases were found in lung tissue despite normal imaging results.
- Standard imaging and scintigraphy failed to detect the micrometastases preoperatively.
- The patient remained disease-free after RAI therapy and surgery.

## Abstract

Pulmonary metastases from papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) are usually detectable by computed tomography (CT) or radioactive iodine (RAI) scanning. Pathologically proven pulmonary micrometastases that are completely undetectable by imaging have rarely been reported. A 39-year-old woman underwent surveillance CT four years after total thyroidectomy for PTC. A solitary right pulmonary nodule, which had been present since before thyroid surgery and had gradually enlarged, was clinically suspected to be metastatic. Wedge resection of the lung revealed the nodule to be a benign hemangioma. However, careful histopathological examination incidentally identified multiple tiny nodules measuring 200-1,000 μm in the surrounding lung parenchyma. These lesions exhibited characteristic features of PTC and were positive for thyroglobulin on immunohistochemistry, confirming pulmonary micrometastases. A retrospective CT review and postoperative RAI scintigraphy failed to detect these lesions. The patient received RAI therapy and remains disease-free 126 months after pulmonary resection. This case demonstrates that pulmonary micrometastases from PTC may exist despite the absence of radiological or scintigraphic findings. Occult micrometastatic disease may be more prevalent than clinically appreciated, highlighting a diagnostic limitation of imaging-based surveillance.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** papillary thyroid carcinoma (MONDO:0005075)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** TG (thyroglobulin) [NCBI Gene 7038] {aka AITD3, TGN}
- **Diseases:** metastases (MESH:D009362), Pulmonary Micrometastases (MESH:D061206), hemangioma (MESH:D006391), PTC (MESH:D000077273)
- **Chemicals:** RAI (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12980108/full.md

## References

8 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12980108/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12980108