World Journal of Clinical Cases | 2021

Salivary duct carcinoma of the submandibular gland presenting a diagnostic challenge: A case report

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


BACKGROUND Salivary duct carcinoma (SDC) is a rare, extremely aggressive malignancy that arises in the submandibular gland. It can metastasize locally early and therefore is an important differential diagnosis of metastatic disease in cervical lymph nodes or specific lymphadenitis such as tuberculous cervical lymphadenitis. CASE SUMMARY We report a case of SDC in the submandibular gland that presented diagnostic difficulty. The lesion was coincidentally discovered through examination of the radiolucent area of the maxilla. Imaging failed to confirm the possibility of specific inflammation, leading us to execute an open biopsy to verify the diagnosis. The surgical specimen showed that the submandibular gland was primarily replaced with a calcified body. Following histological analysis and confirmation, we performed surgical resection, radiotherapy, and various chemotherapies. CONCLUSION Radiographic imaging characteristics of lymph node metastases of salivary gland cancer, especially of SDC, may resemble other cervical lymphadenitis; calcification at the submandibular gland is the landmark of SDC occurring at the subman-dibular gland.

Volume 9
Pages 2908 - 2915
DOI 10.12998/wjcc.v9.i12.2908
Language English
Journal World Journal of Clinical Cases

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