RESUMEN
Chronic immunosuppression is known to cause an increased risk of cancers in organ transplant recipients leading to the rise in morbidity and mortality among these patients. Recent studies have observed that thyroid lesions are more frequently encountered in kidney transplant recipients. A 45-year-old woman with history of chronic hypertension, kidney transplant and graft failure, was admitted for assessment for a second renal transplant and detected to have a thyroid nodule by ultrasound (US). A fine needle aspirate (FNA) on the nodule was reported as Hurthle cell neoplasm. Histopathology revealed a Hurthle cell adenoma with an incidental micro papillary carcinoma. On follow up a year later, US investigation revealed another nodule in the inferior pole of the remnant lobe of thyroid. FNA showed sheets of uniform small round cells arranged in micro follicles, intermixed with Hurthle-like cells with absence of colloid, raising the possibility of a parathyroid lesion. Biochemical tests, clinical history, cytomorphological, immunocytochemical and biochemical tests supported a parathyroid adenoma. Advancements in diagnostic techniques and management strategies have not only improved survival rates in patients with chronic renal disease but have also identified an increasing number of multiple primary tumors in these patients. Thyroid lesions have cytomorphological similarities and may masquerade parathyroid neoplasms. Regular thyroid screening in post- transplant patients, meticulous pathological examination and parathormone assay are crucial in the early diagnosis, management and prevention of morbidity and mortality in these patients. Keywords: Fine needle aspiration, kidney transplant, Hurthle cell neoplasm, parathyroid adenoma, micropapillary carcinoma.