Spindle Epithelial Tumor With Thymus-Like Differentiation of Thyroid (SETTLE): A Case Report and Literature Review.
Spindle epithelial tumor with thymus-like differentiation of thyroid (SETTLE) is very rare neoplasm with 2 cellular forms, epithelial cell and spindle cell, and most reported cases have been in young people. An 11-year-old boy presented with painless swelling of the right neck lasting for more than 2 months. A tumor size measuring approximately 3 × 3 cm was resected, and intraoperative frozen pathology suggested a spindle cell tumor, which was confirmed as SETTLE by immunohistochemical staining and external hospital consultation. The immunohistochemical staining profile of the resected tumor tissue was as follows: cytokeratin (CK) (+), smooth muscle actin (weak+), vimentin (+), CK7 (focal+), B-cell lymphoma 2 (partial+), CD99 (-), calcitonin (+), galectin-3 (+), CK19 (+), and Ki-67 (10%+). Ultrasound at 1-year postoperative follow-up revealed no local recurrence of the lesion or lymph node metastasis in the thyroid gland. We summarized the disease characteristics of SETTLE among 6 cases reported to date and found that SETTLE is associated with a good prognosis and low postoperative recurrence rate. Thus, for this type of malignant thyroid tumor, diagnosis depends mainly on postoperative pathology and immunohistochemical staining and simple surgical resection is recommended.