Carcinoid tumor of the lung

Case contributed by Yahya Baba
Diagnosis certain

Presentation

Cough and fever for 3 days, with elevated inflammatory markers.

Patient Data

Age: 17 years
Gender: Male

Day 1

x-ray
  • ill-defined triangular right mid zone air space opacification obscuring the right heart border

  • medial convexity of the inferior right hilum adjacent to the interlobar artery.

The patient was treated with antibiotics but presented a month later with a recurrence of the symptoms.

One month later

x-ray

Compared to day 1 chest x-ray:

  • decreased size of the right mid-zone air space opacification and increased attenuation

  • elevation of the right hemidiaphragm

  • crowding of the inferior right ribs

CT was subsequently performed to elucidate the findings.

ct
  • complete obstruction of the middle lobe bronchus upstream of a hypervascular intrabronchial nodule

  • middle lobe collapse and consolidation

Pre biopsy CT

ct

Obstruction of the right middle lobe bronchus by the endoluminal nodule is well seen on both soft-tissue and lung reformats.

Histology report

Bronchial biopsy summary: Well-differentiated neuroendocrine tumor of carcinoid type. The typical or atypical subtype cannot be determined on this biopsy sample.

Case Discussion

Although carcinoid tumors account for <1% of primary lung tumors, they are the most frequent lung tumor in childhood and adolescence. 80% occur centrally and can present with obstructive pneumonia.

Chest X-ray interpretation is challenging. The medial convexity on the initial radiograph corresponds with the location of the tumor in the middle lobe bronchus.

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