Background:
DICER1, cancer predisposition syndrome (CPS), seems to escape timely diagnosis in pediatric patients.
Case report 1:
A 16-year-old female patient was referred to the endocrinology ward due to a large goiter. Her medical history indicated normal sexual maturation, with menarche occurring at 13.5 years. Over the past 2.5 years, she developed pronounced androgenic symptoms, including a deepened male voice, facial, back and neckline acne, hirsutism, and menstrual irregularities leading to secondary amenorrhoea.
A thyroid ultrasound identified a multinodular goiter with cystic-solid lesions containing calcifi-cations. An abdominal ultrasound identified a 5.7x6.9 cm solid mass in the right adnexal region, displacing the uterus to the left. Histopathological examination confirmed a Sertoli-Leydig cell tumor. The patient was subjected to total thyroidectomy. Histopathology revealed benign follicular cell-derived neoplasms. Thyroid follicular nodular disease was diagnosed bilaterally.
DNA analysis using NGS, confirmed by the Sanger method, revealed a pathogenic heterozygotic variant c.2953>T [p.Gln985*] in exon 18 of DICER1 gene.
Case report 2:
A 12-year-old male patient was admitted to the pediatric surgery unit due to a 33 ml goiter. A month prior to admission, the patient discovered a palpable nodule in his neck, accompanied by hoarseness. An ultrasound revealed a multinodular goiter. Molecular analysis revealed a pathogenic heterozygotic variant c.2782C>T [p.Gln928Ter] in exon 17 of DICER1 gene. Subsequently, a total thyroidectomy was performed, and histopathological examination revealed thyroid follicular nodu-lar disease bilaterally.
Conclusion:
Multinodular goiter, although rare in pediatric population, when accompanied by characteristic ultrasound and histopathological features, and by additional features such as androgen excess,
warrants exclusion of DICER1 syndrome.