Journal List > Korean J Hematol > v.40(4) > 1032644

Sul, Kim, Kim, Kim, Choi, Jo, and Kim: Peripheral Blood Eosinophilia: An Unusual Presentation of Bone Marrow Involvement in a Patient with Relapsed Thyroid Papillary Carcinoma

Abstract

Peripheral blood eosinophilia is a well-known paraneoplastic manifestation, but its underlying mechanism is still unclear. Bone marrow metastasis may be a cause of malignancy-associated eosinophilia. However, there is limited evidence of the relationship between bone marrow metastasis and eosinophilia. Herein, we present a unique case of peripheral blood eosinophilia associated with bone marrow invasion in a patient having a history of papillary thyroid carcinoma. A 68-year old woman showed peripheral blood eosinophilia (91,525/mm3). Since the time she was initially diagnosed as having papillary thyroid carcinoma, eosinophilia had never been found and the other causes of eosinophilia were excluded. A bone marrow study revealed cancer cell infiltration; multiple lymphadenopathies and liver metastasis were also detected. We treated her with steroid; however, her eosinophilia did not respond to steroid and the patient died due to disease progression. Although peripheral blood eosinophilia and bone marrow metastasis are rare findings in patients with papillary thyroid carcinoma, we suggest that eosinophilia might be a sign of the bone marrow metastasis of papillary thyroid carcinoma.

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Fig. 1.
This figure shows many eosinophils. They are mature form eosinophils, and no blast forms (×100, Giemsa stain, peripheral blood smear).
kjh-40-274f1.tif
Fig. 2.
This figure shows bone marrow with eosinophilic infiltration. Infiltrated eosinophils are mature form (X400, H & E stain).
kjh-40-274f2.tif
Fig. 3.
This figure shows bone marrow with malignant carcinoma cell infiltration. Malignant cells are high N/C ratio and small irregular nucleus (X400, H & E stain).
kjh-40-274f3.tif
Fig. 4.
Abdominal pelvic CT. This shows multiple liver metastasis and adrenal metastasis.
kjh-40-274f4.tif
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