Background: Hyalinizing clear cell carcinoma (HCCC) is a rare salivary gland neoplasm most often found in the oral cavity. Although it is generally a low-grade malignancy that is treated with wide local excision, there is a growing body of evidence pointing toward the potential for more aggressive behavior.
Methods: We reviewed available records of patients with delayed cervical lymph node metastases from HCCC.
Results: Two patients who were treated with wide local resection for HCCC and remained disease-free at the primary site were diagnosed with cervical lymph node metastases 10 and 14 years later. We treated both with neck dissection, and 1 patient received adjuvant radiation therapy.
Conclusion: These cases illustrate the risk for occult nodal metastases from HCCC with delayed presentation. Clinician awareness of the presence of subclinical metastases in the neck requires thorough long-term surveillance and potential intervention should nodal disease become manifest.
Keywords: clear cell carcinoma; delayed metastases; hyalinizing; lymph node metastases; salivary gland.
© 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.