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Masquerade syndrome: sebaceous carcinoma presenting as an unknown primary with pagetoid spread to the nasal cavity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 March 2006

Tanuja Shet
Affiliation:
Department of Pathology, Tata Memorial Hospital, Parel, Mumbai-400012, India.
Gauri Kelkar
Affiliation:
Department of Pathology, Tata Memorial Hospital, Parel, Mumbai-400012, India.
Shashi Juvekar
Affiliation:
Department of Radiology, Tata Memorial Hospital, Parel, Mumbai-400012, India.
Rajesh Mistry
Affiliation:
Department of Surgery, Tata Memorial Hospital, Parel, Mumbai-400012, India.
Anita Borges
Affiliation:
Department of Pathology, Tata Memorial Hospital, Parel, Mumbai-400012, India.

Abstract

Sebaceous carcinoma of the eyelid is an uncommon tumour with unusual modes of presentation. It can remain occult at the primary site, without producing any mass, masquerading as chronic blepharoconjunctivitis, while setting up metastases in the regional lymph nodesespecially in the pre-auricular group.

We report here a case that not only masqueraded as chronic blepharoconjunctivitis with nodal metastases from an ’unknown primary’ in the neck, but whose tumour spread in a pagetoid manner along the nasolacrimal duct producing a nasal tumour that was believed to be the ’unknown primary’.

This case emphasizes the need for ophthalmologists, ENT surgeons and pathologists to keep sebaceous carcinoma in mind while evaluating patients with chronic blepharoconjunctivitis and cervical node metastases from ’unknown primary’. Histological clues for picking up a sebaceous carcinoma at a metastatic site include a tumour with comedo or ductal growth pattern and intracytoplasmic lipid.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© Royal Society of Medicine Press Limited 2004

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