clinical, pathological and prognostic aspects lidia ionescu andriescu, cozmin radulescu,daniel guta,...
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Clinical, pathological and prognostic
aspects Lidia Ionescu Andriescu, Cozmin Radulescu,Daniel
Guta, Irina Trifescu, Cristian Dragomir- the IIIrd.Surgical
UnitDan Ferariu, Doina Butcovan- Pathology
DepartementDecember- 2008
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THYMOMASAll thymomas originate from epithelial thymic
cells
4% of them consist of a pure population of epithelial cells
Most have mixed populations of lymphoid cells to a varying extent
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THYMOMAS20% of all mediastinal neoplasms
50% of all primary tumors in the anterior compartment
90% of thymic tumors are thymomas
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THYMOMASSlow-growing tumors
Exhibit malignant potential: Local invasionSystemic metastasiswithout overt cytological features of malignancy
More common between ages 40 to 60
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Clinical presentation~50% - asymptomatic, discovered incidentally on
CXR or at autopsy~30% local symptoms related with pressure or
local invasion: SVC sdr., cough, chest pain, dysphonia, dysphagia
~20%- 70% associated with an autoimmiune disease:Myasthenia gravisPure red cell aplasiaPolymyosistishypogammaglobulnemia
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Prognostic factors
Their morphologic heterogeneity has caused much
confusionregarding their classification.
Several classifications have been proposed to correlate histology and clinical course.
Previous studies have shown that the mediastinal invasion as reflected by the staging system of Masaoka negatively affects survival
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Prognostic factorsStage II tumors can recur after complete resection.
indicating that the Masaoka classification might not be sufficient to classify the role of combined treatment modalities in patients with thymoma
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Prognostic factorsTumor extent but also grading the tumor could
be required to predict prognosis and recurrence pattern
which might help to define more precisely the role of adjuvant and neoadjuvant treatments.
Therefore, not only staging, the several histologic classifications have been assessed, but they did not help to predict the evolution of thymic tumors after resection
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Histologic classifications1961- Bernatz et al. –Mayo ClinicAccording to the lymphocyte-epithelial cell
ratio:LymphocyticEpithelialMixedSpindle subtypesAt that time thymic carcinomas were not
segregated but grouped with thymomas
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1978 Levine and Rosai
New classification of high clinical relevance
Benign thymoma- circumscribed
Malignant thymomas-invasive:Type I- invasive with minimal atypiaType II- moderate to marked atypia (thymic
carcinoma)
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Wick 1982Lewis 1987Thymomas
Thymic carcinoma
Mixed thymomas with islets of thymic carcinoma behave clinically like typical thymoma more than like thymic carcinoma
Thymomas carry the potential for malignant transformation into malignant thymic carcinoma
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Marino & Muller Hermelink 1985The origin of the cells, according to their
resemblance to the normal epithelial cells in other parts of the thymic lobule
Cortical thymoma - epi. cells are large, round, poligonal
Medullary thymoma - epi. cells are smaller, spindle-shaped
Cortical thymoma more agressive than medullary thymoma
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Muller-HermelinkThis classification was suggested to have
independent prognostic implications1990- Pescarmona- 80-patient cases found
that M-H classif. reliably predicted prognosisMedullary thymoma
More encapsulatedClinically act benign
Cortical thymomaMore invasiveMalignant in nature
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Muller-HermelinkWilkins-1995 reported:
Few recurrences in patients with medullary and mixed thymoma
Higher recurrences in pts. with cortical thymomas
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WHO classificationRosai, 1999Reflects the consensus of the pathologists
The cellular origins are emphasized
Is a successful synthesis of the most widely used classification
Resemble more the M-H classification
Currently –the preferred classification
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WHO classificationType A- atrophic adult-life cells, spindle or oval in
shape
Type B- bioactive thymic cells of fetus or infant with dentritic or epitheloid appearance
Further divided into B1, B2, B3 on the basis of increasing epithelial to lymfoid ratio and the emergence of atypia of the cells
Type AB- display the common features of type A and B
Type C – franckly malignant cells;low-to-high grade
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CLASSIFICATIONS
ROSAI-LEVINE Tip WHO MULLER-HERMELINK
BENIGN THYMOMA A MEDULLARY THYMOMA
BENIGN THYMOMA AB MIXED THYMOMA MALIGNANT TYPE I B1 PREDOMINANT CORTICAL
MALIGNANT TYPE I B2 CORTICAL THYMOMA
MALIGNANT TYPE I B3 WELL-DIFFERENTIATED
CARCINOMA
MALIGNANT TYPE II C THYMIC CARCINOMA
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WHO Classification Type A thymoma.• This type accounts for approximately 4% to
7% of all cases of thymoma, and is also referred to as spindle cell thymoma or medullary thymoma.
• The prognosis for people with type A thymoma is good, with a 15-year relative survival rate near 100%.
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WHO Classification Type AB thymoma. • Type AB thymoma, or mixed thymoma, accounts
for approximately 28% to 34% of thymoma cases. • Type AB thymoma is similar to type A; however,
there are lymphocytes that are mixed in the tumor, and approximately 16% of cases are thought to be associated with myasthenia gravis.
• The prognosis for people with type AB thymoma is also good, with a 15-year relative survival rate of approximately 90%.
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WHO Classification Type B1 thymoma. • Type B1 thymoma accounts for approximately 9%
to 20% of thymoma cases, and is also known as lymphocyte-rich thymoma, lymphocytic thymoma, predominantly cortical thymoma, and organoid thymoma.
• This type of thymoma has a high concentration of lymphocytes in the tumor, but the cells of the thymus appear normal. Approximately 57% of type B1 thymoma cases are thought to be associated with myasthenia gravis.
• The prognosis for people with type B1 thymoma is also good, with a 20-year relative survival rate of approximately 90%.
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WHO Classification Type B2 thymoma. • Type B2 thymoma has a high concentration of
lymphocytes, like type B1 thymoma; however, the thymus cells do not appear normal.
• Type B2 thymoma is also known as cortical thymoma and polygonal cell thymoma, and accounts for approximately 20% to 36% of all thymoma cases.
• About 71% of cases of type B2 thymoma are thought to be associated with myasthenia gravis.
• The 20-year relative survival rate for people with type B2 thymoma is approximately 60%.
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WHO Classification Type B3 thymoma. • Type B3 thymoma is also known as epithelial
thymoma, atypical thymoma, squamoid thymoma, and well-differentiated thymoma.
• It accounts for approximately 10% to 14% of thymoma cases.
• This type of thymoma has few lymphocytes, and the thymus cells look close to normal.
• About 46% of type B3 thymoma cases are thought to be associated with myasthenia gravis, and the 20-year relative survival rate is approximately 40%.
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WHO Classification Type C thymoma (or Thymic carcinoma).• Type C thymoma is very aggressive. The cells in thymic
carcinoma do not look like normal thymus cells, but like cancers in other organs of the body.
• Thymic carcinoma may start from a pre-existing thymoma that has transformed into a more aggressive tumor.
• This type of thymoma is often advanced when diagnosed,
• Can be divided into two categories: low grade (better prognosis) and high grade (more likely to grow and spread quickly).
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WHO ClassificationLow-grade thymic carcinoma includes:
- basaloid, - mucoepidermoid, - well-differentiated squamous cell types.
High-grade thymic carcinoma includes: - anaplastic/undifferentiated, - clear cell, - poorly differentiated squamous cell, - sarcomatoid, - small cell/neuroendocrine types.
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Thymic carcinoma• People with thymic carcinoma do not have
associated myasthenia gravis.
• The five-year relative survival rate of people with thymic carcinoma is 38%.
• The 10-year relative survival rate of people with thymic carcinoma is 28%.
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Prognosis after histologic type
WHO Histologic Description Free Survival at 10 years, %
• A Medullary thymoma 100• AB Mixed thymoma 100• B1 Predominantly cortical thymoma 83• B2 Cortical thymoma 83• B3 Well-differentiated thymic carcinoma 35• C Thymic carcinoma 28Series of 100 thymomas resected in Japan between 1973
and 2001 using the WHO classification.
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“Prognostic Relevance of Masaoka and Muller- Hermelink Classification in Patients With Thymic Tumors”
Didier Lardinois, MD, Renate Rechsteiner, MD, R. Hubert La¨ ng, MD,
Matthias Gugger, MD, Daniel Betticher, MD, Christian von Briel, MD,
Thorsten Krueger, MD, and Hans-Beat Ris, MD
(Ann Thorac Surg 2000;69:1550 –5)
Department of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Institute ofPathology, Division of Pulmonary Medicine, Institute of Oncology
and Clinic of Radio-oncology, University of Berne, Berne, Switzerland
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Results
Masaoka stage found Stage I - 31 patients (44.9%), stage II - 17 (24.6%), stage III - 19 (27.6%), and stage IV - 2 (2.9%).
The 10-year overall survival rate was; 83.5% for stage I, 100% for stage IIa, 58% for stage IIb, 44% for stage III, 0% for stage IV.
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ResultsHistologic classification according to Muller-
Hermelink - medullary tumors in 7 patients (10.1%),
- mixed in 18 (26.1%), - organoid in 14 (20.3%), - cortical in 11 (15.9%), - well-differentiated carcinoma in 14 (20.3%), - endocrine carcinoma in 5 (7.3%), 10- year overall survival rates of 100%, 75%, 92%,
87.5%, 30%, and 0%, respectively.Medullary, mixed, and well-differentiated organoid
tumors were correlated with stage I and II, Well-differentiated thymic carcinoma and endocrine
carcinoma with stage III and IV (p < 0.001)
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ResultsMultivariate analysis showed age, gender,
myasthenia gravis, and postoperative adjuvant therapy not to be significant predictors of survival after complete resection, whereas
the Muller-Hermelink and Masaoka classifications were independent significant predictors for overall (p < 0.05)
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Masaoka anatomic classification 1981Based on the presence or abscence of gross
or microscopic invasion of the tumor capsule as well as the metastatic status
Medullary and mixed thymomas are usually not invasive and correspond to stages I and II
Cortical thymomas are more commonly invasive and more likely to be in stages III and IV
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Masaoka Classification-1981STAGE IEncapsulated tumor with no gross or microscopic invasion
TREATMENT Complete surgical excisionSTAGE IIMacroscopic invasion into the mediastinal fat or pleura or microscopic invasion into the capsule
TREATMENT Complete surgical excision and postoperative radiotherapy to decrease the incidence of local recurrenceSTAGE IIIMacroscopic invasion of the pericardium, great vessels, or lung
TREATMENT Complete surgical excision and postoperative radiotherapy to decrease the incidence of local recurrenceSTAGE IVAPleural or pericardial metastatic spread
TREATMENT Surgical debulking, radiotherapy, and chemotherapySTAGE IVBLymphogenous or hematogenous metastases
TREATMENT Surgical debulking, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy
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Modified Masaoka Clinical Staging as used by Koga 1994 and Nakagawa 2003 More widely adopted Incorporated microscopic incomplete capsular invasion into stage I, leaving transcapsular invasion in stage II
Stage I - fully encapsulated tumor ( a thymoma completely surrounded by a fibrous capsule that is not infiltrated in its full thickness)
Stage II- tumor infiltrates beyond the capsule into the thymus or fatty tissue. Adhesion to the mediastinal pleura may be present
Stage III- macroscopic invasion into neighboring organsStage IVA- pleural or pericardial disseminationStage IVB- lymphogenous or hematogenous
metastases
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“Observer variation in the histopathological classification of thymoma: correlation with prognosis.” A Dawson, N B Ibrahim, and A R Gibbs Department of Histopathology, Llandough Hospital, Cardiff.
AIMS -To assess the ability of three histopathologists, experienced in
thoracic surgical reporting, consistently to classify thymomas as cortical, medullary, or mixed pattern tumours
METHODS--Three histopathologists classified 74 thymomas (none frank carcinomas) as of either cortical, medullary, or mixed pattern, on two separate occasions. Kappa statistics were used to assess inter- and intra-observer agreement. Tumour type was compared with surgical stage as a predictor of biological behaviour.
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RESULTSInter- and intra-observer agreement were only moderate (kappa
0.48 and 0.52, respectively). For only 26 of 74 tumours could a categorisation be consistently
agreed on. . The prognoses for those 26 of 74 cases appeared to be at variance from previously reported studies, and showed internal inconsistency, with the mixed pattern category showing a worse survival than the cortical category.
For the group as a whole, however, stage at presentation was related to survival, with an overall five year survival of 78%
100% for stage I, 84% for stage II, 27% for stage III and 0% for stage IV
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CONCLUSIONS
The classification of thymomas into cortical, medullary, or mixed pattern
tumours is difficult to apply.
Surgical stage remains a better guide to prognosis.
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Proposed WHO TNM Classification
So much controversy during the past 4 decades, no authorized TNM system has been adopted
The proposed WHO TNM scheme remains tentative pending validation of its reliability, reproducibility and predictive power
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WHO TNM Classification
T factorTx- primary can not be assessedT0- no evidence of primary tumorT1- macroscopically completely encapsulated
and microscopically no capsular invasionT2- macroscopically adhesion or invasion into
surrounding fatty tissue or mediastinal pleura or microscopic invasion into the capsule
T3-invasion into neighboring organs such as pericardium, great vessels, lung
T4- pleural or pericardial dissemination
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WHO TNM ClassificationN factorNx- regional lymph nodes can not be
assessedN0- no lymph nodes metastasisN1- metastases to anterior mediastinal lymph
nodesN2- metastases to intrathoracic lymph nodes
except anterior mediastinal lymph nodesN3- metastases to extrathoracic lymph nodes
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WHO TNM Classification
M factorMx- distant metastases can not be assessedM0- no distant metastasesM1- hematogenous metastases
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Stage grouping as detailed by Haserjion 2005
Stage I- T1, N0,M0
Stage II- T2, N0, M0
Stage III- T1, N1, MO; T2, N1, MO, T3, N0-1, MO
Stage IV- T4, any N, M0; any T, N2-3, M0; any T, any N, M1
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DIAGNOSISBiopsy:• If a patient presents with atypical features or is
found to have an invasive tumor and is under consideration for induction therapy, obtaining preoperative biopsy is indicated.
• The limited anterior mediastinotomy (Chamberlain approach) is the standard approach that typically is performed over the projection of the tumor.
• A thoracoscopic approach for biopsy also can be used
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DIAGNOSIS• Chest CT scan is the imaging procedure of
choice in patients with MG. – Thymic enlargement should be determined
because most enlarged thymus glands on CT scan represent a thymoma.
– CT scan with intravenous contrast dye is preferred – to show the relationship between the thymoma and
surrounding vascular structures, – to define the degree of its vascularity, and – to guide the surgeon in removal of a large tumor,
possibly involving other mediastinal structures
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MV, male, 46 years old, 6w. history of MG- Oss. III, CT suspicious for thymoma, Op. 2004, histology- thymic lymphoid hyperplasia + mediastinal ectopies, post.op.- complete remission
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GE, 19 years old man, Hashimoto thyroiditis, hemolytic anemia, (Hb-4g/dl), CT- thymoma, op.dec 2005, histology- thymic lymphoid hypertrophy
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PF, female, 21 years old, MG- OSS III, CT- thymic hyperplasia, op. 1997- histology- lymphocitic thymoma
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DIAGNOSIS• Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). An MRI uses magnetic fields, not x-rays, to produce detailed images of
the body.
• Positron emission tomography (PET) scan. In a PET scan, radioactive sugar molecules are injected into the body.
Cancer cells absorb sugar more quickly than normal cells, so they light up on the PET scan.
PET scans are often used to complement information gathered from CT scan, MRI, and physical examination.
CT scanning reveals evidence of an anterior mediastinal mass, the PET scan shows a hypermetabolic mass consistent with this location, thereby raising suspicion of malignancy.
PET scanning should be added to the armamentarium as an available diagnostic modality to aid in staging and excluding extramediastinal involvement
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PROGNOSIS• The prognosis of a person with a thymoma is
based on the tumor's gross characteristics at operation, not the histological appearance.
• Benign tumors are noninvasive and encapsulated.• Conversely, malignant tumors are defined by local
invasion into the thymic capsule or surrounding tissue.
• The Masaoka staging system of thymomas is the most commonly accepted system.
• Preponderance of evidence indicates that all thymomas, except completely encapsulated stage 1 tumors, benefit from adjuvant radiation therapy
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SURGERY• The preferred approach is a median sternotomy
providing adequate exposure of the mediastinal structures and allowing complete removal of the thymus,
• If the tumor is small and appears readily accessible, perform a total thymectomy with contiguous removal of mediastinal fat.
• If the tumor is invasive, perform a total thymectomy in addition to en bloc removal of involved pericardium, pleura, lung, phrenic nerve, innominate vein, or superior vena cava. Resect one phrenic nerve; however, if both phrenics are involved, do not resect either nerve, and debulk the area.
• Clip areas of close margins or residual disease to assist the radiation oncologist in treatment planning
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Radiotherapy• Adjuvant radiation therapy in completely or
incompletely resected stage III or IV thymomas is considered a standard of care.
• The use of postoperative radiation therapy in stage II thymomas has been more questionable.
• Thymomas are indolent tumors that may take at least 10 years to recur; therefore, short-term follow-up will not depict relapses accurately.
• Furthermore, the gross appearance of tumor invasiveness is subjective, depending on the opinion of the surgeon. In one report at Massachusetts General Hospital, 22% of patients (5 out of 23) with stage II disease developed recurrence, leading to a proposed recommendation that postoperative radiation be instituted in all patients with stage II thymoma
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Radiotherapy• In a study conducted by Curran and colleagues, of
21 patients with stage II and III disease who did not undergo postoperative radiation therapy, 8 had recurrence in the mediastinum. The 5 patients who received adjuvant radiation did not have recurrences.
• A series from Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, showed that adjuvant radiation therapy did not improve survival or decrease recurrence in stage II and III disease. To reduce the incidence of local relapse, perform postoperative adjuvant radiation therapy in patients without completely encapsulated stage I tumors.
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Thymomas operated in the IIIrd. Surgical Unit
82 thymic lesions operated over a period 1982-2008
23 thymomas- 28%
Out of 23 thymomas- 19 cases were associated with MG- 82,6%
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Histologic distribution
Clasificarea WHO Muller-HermelinkType A-2 cases medullary- 2 casesType AB-7 cases mixt -7 casesType B1-9cases predominant cortical-9 casesType B2- 0 cases cortical- 0 casesType B3-3 cases well differentiated -3 casesType C- 1case carcinom anaplazic-1caseThymic carcinoid – 1 case
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TREATMENTStage Masaoka I- 9 cases:
4 no adjuvant therapy,2 radiochemotherapy, death at 4 months and 6
years due to acute respiratory failure, 1 radiotherapy only 2 chemotherapy onlyWHO classification of thymomas stage Masaoka IType A -2 casesType B1-5 cases,- 2 deathsType B3-1case
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TreatmentMasaoka II- 5 cases 1 case radiotherapy only 1 case chemotherapy only 3 cases radio+chemotherapyAfter Who classification:Type AB-2Type B1-2Type B3-1
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TreatmentMasaoka III- 8cases: radiochemotherapy in all 3 deaths:
2 deaths at 2(C) and 6(AB) postop. years due to acute resp. failure
1 death at 17(AB) postop. years due to miocardial infarction
Who classification: Type AB-5 cases, Type B1-1, Type B3-1, Type C-1Ovaral mortality 5 out of 28 cases:1 medical cause1 unresectable malignant II thymomas- Bx
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Complications radiotherapyComplications : radiation pericarditis, radiation pneumonitis, pulmonary fibrosis
Consider carefully the risk versus benefit ratio of adjuvant radiation therapy because deaths
from these complications have been reported
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Recurrence
Relapse after primary therapy for a thymoma may occur after 10-20 years.
Therefore, long-term follow-up probably should continue to be performed throughout the patient's life.
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Chemotherapy• The most common chemotherapy drugs in the
treatment of thymoma are:• doxorubicin (Adriamycin, Rubex), • cisplatin (Platinol), • cyclophosphamide (Cytoxan, Neosar), • etoposide (VePesid, Etopophos, Toposar), and • ifosfamide (Ifex, Holoxan).
• The common combinations used for the treatment of thymoma include:
• cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, and cisplatin, or etoposide and cisplatin.
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Chemotherapy
• Chemotherapy combinations are sometimes used to shrink the tumor before surgery if the thymoma is more advanced.
• Chemotherapy may also be used for stage IV thymoma or recurrent thymoma that is not surgically removable.
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Chemotherapy
Drug combinations. • The combination of carboplatin (Paraplatin) and
paclitaxel (Taxol) is being studied for the treatment of advanced thymoma.
New agents. Therapies explored in clinical trials:• Premetrexed (Alimta)- antifolate antineoplastic agent
for treating advanced thymic cancers.• Imatinib (Gleevec) is a drug that turns off an enzyme
that causes cells to become cancerous and multiply. It is being studied to treat patients with thymic tumors
over-expressing the c-kit and/or PDGF genes.
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“Asociatia chimioterapie-radioterapie in tratamentul timoamelor maligne” Anda I.Buiuc, Lidia Andriescu, Elena AlbulescuRev. Romana de Oncologie, 36(2),171-175, 1999
11 invasive thymoma patients, treated over a period of 10 years: 1989-1999
• Multimodal treatment: surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy.
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Results 7 timoame invasive associate cu MG au fost initial operate, (5 rezectie
complete si 2 incomplete) 3 au primit numai radioterapie -2, asociere radio/chimio-2 numai chimioterapie .
Radioterapia a fost adm.la 4-6 sapt postop. Cu o doza totala de 44-50Gy prin 2 campuri opuse AP mediastinale. La 2 cazuri rxT s-a interrupt din cauza insuficientei respiratorii cu intubare consecutive.
1 caz a decedat in timpul radioterapiei dupa adm. De CP iv 200mg/zi si dexa 16mg/zi urmate de plasmafereza.
Cazurile numai cu trat.ChT- CP 200mg/zi perop 10 zile/luna, 4-6 cicluri. Rezultate: 1 remisie comleta, 5 remisii partiale- mestinon 1/zi, 1 deces.
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Radiochemotherapy in locally advanced malignant thymomas
4 cases of locally advanced malignant thymoma proven on biopsy
Case I -invasive mixed thymoma, stage III, female, 31years old, 4 sessions of ADOC-ADOC
(Adriamicine,Cisplatin,Vincristine,Ciclophosphamide) partial response+ radiotherapy 44GY + 1 session ADOC. At 6 years the tumor size decreased with 75%, no symptoms.
Case 2- female, 27 years old, mixed thymoma stage III, SVC sdr.4 sessions ADOC with complete remission+ radiotherapy 44 Gy,
At 1 year posttherapy- no detectable tumor on CT, and no symptoms
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AS, female, 27 years old, CT-1998- TUMOR MASS WITH NECROTIC AREAS IN THE ANTERO-SUPERIOR MEDIASTINUM
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CT aspect after chemo/radiotherapy
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CT aspect after chemo/radiotherapy
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Radiochemotherapy in locally advanced thymomas
Case 3- male, 27 years old, thymic carcinoma stage III- SVC sdr.
Chemotherapy- cisplatin, vinblastin, bleomicina, adriamicina- 5 sessions with partial remission after the first 2 cycles, radiotherapy-44Gy ,
CHTX.- ADOC+CISPLATIN/ETOPOSID, partial response, death at 2 years from diagnosis
Case 4.- male, 38 years old, anaplasic thymic carcinoma invading the ribs, left lung, compressing trachea, SVC.
Chemotherapy + RXT: 2 cycles ADOC, 40GY- reduction 50%, 3 cycles ADOC+ bleomicina- complete remission for 4 months, Bilateral adrenal MTS, cisplatin/etoposid partial response after 3 cycles. Liver MTS death at 15 months from diagnosis.
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Future treatment• Studies have investigated the molecular changes in
thymomas. In one study, 10 out of 12 thymomas exhibited epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) expression.
This information would be useful in selecting patients that may benefit from EGFR inhibitors as part of their treatment regimen.
• Other areas of investigation include apoptosis-related markers, such as p63, a member of the p53 family. p63 was found to be expressed in virtually all thymomas.
• Further research pertaining to the biology of thymomas will allow more adequate approaches to treatment.
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CT, 60 years old, thymoma+MG, Oss.IV, op. 2002,
Lymphocitic thymoma (type I malignant thymoma)-Masaoka II ( well encapsulated but microscopic capsular invasion), adhesions to left M. pleura which was resected
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Radiotherapy 44 Gy, chemotherapy, 1 year CP+PDNPericarditis and mixedema at 1 year postRxTRemission of MG for 5 years, 2008- AChE
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AM, 46 years old, multinodular goitre with hyperthyroidy and myasthenia gravis
Compressive goitre Retrosternal goitre
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Normal thymus on CT scan ?, Total thyroidectomy for MNG, myasthenia gravis persisted
Normal Chest Normal thymus
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Paramedian low retrosternal mass
Well-encapsulated mass
Antero- inferior mediastinal mass
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Thymic scintigraphy- hypercaptation of 99m-Tc-tetrofosmin consistent with a thymomaThymectomy 6 months after total thyroidectomy
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Timom AB, HE, invazie extracapsulara in grasimea peritimica
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Timom AB, focar de invazie extracapsulara, van Gieson
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GM, 32 years old, Cushing sdr. , ACTH -292pg/ml.(n<46). CT- anterior mediastinal mass, pericardial adhesion,Op. sept. 2008-thymectomy+pericardectomy+mediastinal pleurectomy. Histology: well-differentiated thymic neuroendocrine carcinoma, transcapsular invasion, pT2NxMx, Immunhistochemistry: NSE, chromogranin, synaptophizin- intense positive, MNF116-moderate positive, Ki 67-10%, post.op. ACTH-37pg/ml. Chushingoid clinical aspect disappeared
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GV, 59 years old, MG-Oss.III, CT- anterior mediastinal mass invading left mediastinal pleura, Op. -2004, Histology- predominant cortical thymoma, B1, Masaoka II, Adjuvant radiochemotherapy
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GV, B1 type thymoma, R0 extended thymectomy, good recovery after radiochemotherapy
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A.Gh. 65 years old, 3 w. of severe myasthenia, Oss.IIICT-calcified thymoma adherent to the left mediastinal pleura, op. 2003, histology- type A, medullary thymoma without capsular invasion, chemotherapy CP+PDN, obvious improvement
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TD, 39 years old, MG-Oss.III, intubated for 3 w. 3PF without result, CT –mediastinal mass, op. jan. 2007, after 3 w. of intubation, tracheostomy, histology- thymus with cystic degeneration, after 3 months CR
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Conclusions
No clear histologic distinction between benign and malignant thymomas exists.
The propensity of a thymoma to be malignant is determined by the invasiveness of the thymoma.