Stage Information for Thymoma and
Thymic Carcinomas
Computed
tomography (CT) with intravenous contrast may be useful in the diagnosis and
clinical staging of thymoma, especially for noninvasive tumors. CT is usually
accurate in predicting the following:
·
Tumor
size.
·
Location.
·
Invasion
into vessels, the pericardium, and the lungs.
However, CT
cannot predict invasion or resectability with accuracy.[1,2] Appearance of the tumor on CT may be
related to the World Health Organization (WHO) histologic type.[3] A retrospective study involving 53 patients
who underwent thymectomy for thymic epithelial tumors indicated that smooth
contours with a round shape were most suggestive of type A thymomas, and
irregular contours were most suggestive of thymic carcinomas. Calcification was
suggestive of type B thymomas. In this study, however, CT was found to be of
limited value differentiating type AB, B1, B2, and B3 thymomas.[4]
Most
patients with thymic carcinomas present initially with any of the following:
·
Cough.
·
Chest
pain.
·
Phrenic
nerve palsy.
·
Superior
vena cava syndrome.
Patients
may have evidence of invasion of contiguous mediastinal structures at
presentation. Thymic carcinoma can metastasize to any of the following:
·
Regional
lymph nodes.
·
Bone.
·
Liver.
·
Lungs.
An
evaluation for sites of metastases may be warranted for these patients.
Positron
emission tomography of 18-flouro-deoxyglucose (FDG-PET) as well as thallium
single-photon emission computed tomography have been reported in small series
for diagnosis and evaluation of therapeutic outcomes in thymic carcinoma.[5-8] Two small series reported that FDG uptake
was related to the invasiveness of thymic carcinoma.[7,8] This raises the possibility of FDG-PET
utilization for diagnosis, treatment planning, and monitoring for recurrence.
Sensitivity, specificity impact on clinical therapeutic decisions, remains to
be defined.
Histologic
classification of thymoma is not sufficient to distinguish biologically benign
thymomas from malignant thymomas. The degree of invasion or tumor stage is
generally thought to be a more important indicator of overall survival.[1,9,10]
Evaluating
the invasiveness of a thymoma involves the use of staging criteria that
indicate the presence and degree of contiguous invasion, the presence of
implants, and lymph node or distant metastases regardless of histologic type.
Although no standardized staging system exists, the one proposed by Masaoka in
1981 is commonly employed.[11] It was revised in 1994 and is shown
below.[11]
Thymoma
Staging System of Masaoka 1994a
|
|
Stage
|
Description
|
a[12]
|
|
I
|
Macroscopically, completely encapsulated; microscopically,
no capsular invasion.
|
II
|
Macroscopic invasion into surrounding fatty tissue or
mediastinal pleura; microscopic invasion into capsule.
|
III
|
Macroscopic invasion into neighboring organs (pericardium,
lung, and great vessels).
|
IVa
|
Pleural or pericardial dissemination.
|
IVb
|
Lymphogenous or hematogenous metastases.
|
Application
of this staging system to a series of 85 surgically treated patients confirmed
its value in determining prognosis, with 5-year survival rates of 96% for stage
I disease, 86% for stage II disease, 69% for stage III disease, and 50% for
stage IV disease.[11,13] In a large, retrospective study involving
273 patients with thymoma, 20-year survival rates (as defined by freedom from
tumor death) according to the Masaoka staging system were reported to be 89%
for stage I disease, 91% for stage II disease, 49% for stage III disease, and
0% for stage IV disease.[9]
In a
retrospective analysis of 130 resected, thymoma patients, the WHO pathological
classification was tightly correlated with stage and by multivariate analysis,
tumor size, completeness of resection, histologic subtype, and stage were
significant prognostic factors for survival. Of note, only four patients
received neoadjuvant cisplatin-based chemotherapy and complete resection was
possible in 95% of cases. The 5-year survival rate of the 11 stage IV patients
was 47%.[12]
References
- Sperling B,
Marschall J, Kennedy R, et al.: Thymoma: a review of the clinical and
pathological findings in 65 cases. Can J Surg 46 (1): 37-42, 2003. [PUBMED Abstract]
- Rendina EA, Venuta
F, Ceroni L, et al.: Computed tomographic staging of anterior mediastinal
neoplasms. Thorax 43 (6): 441-5, 1988. [PUBMED Abstract]
- Rosai J:
Histological Typing of Tumours of the Thymus. New York, NY:
Springer-Verlag, 2nd ed., 1999.
- Tomiyama N, Johkoh
T, Mihara N, et al.: Using the World Health Organization Classification of
thymic epithelial neoplasms to describe CT findings. AJR Am J Roentgenol
179 (4): 881-6, 2002. [PUBMED Abstract]
- Sasaki M, Kuwabara
Y, Ichiya Y, et al.: Differential diagnosis of thymic tumors using a
combination of 11C-methionine PET and FDG PET. J Nucl Med 40 (10):
1595-601, 1999. [PUBMED Abstract]
- Kageyama M, Seto H,
Shimizu M, et al.: Thallium-201 single photon emission computed tomography
in the evaluation of thymic carcinoma. Radiat Med 12 (5): 237-9, 1994
Sep-Oct. [PUBMED Abstract]
- Adams S, Baum RP, Hertel
A, et al.: Metabolic (PET) and receptor (SPET) imaging of well- and less
well-differentiated tumours: comparison with the expression of the Ki-67
antigen. Nucl Med Commun 19 (7): 641-7, 1998. [PUBMED Abstract]
- Kubota K, Yamada S,
Kondo T, et al.: PET imaging of primary mediastinal tumours. Br J Cancer
73 (7): 882-6, 1996. [PUBMED Abstract]
- Okumura M, Ohta M,
Tateyama H, et al.: The World Health Organization histologic
classification system reflects the oncologic behavior of thymoma: a
clinical study of 273 patients. Cancer 94 (3): 624-32, 2002. [PUBMED Abstract]
- Chen G, Marx A,
Wen-Hu C, et al.: New WHO histologic classification predicts prognosis of
thymic epithelial tumors: a clinicopathologic study of 200 thymoma cases
from China. Cancer 95 (2): 420-9, 2002. [PUBMED Abstract]
- Masaoka A, Monden
Y, Nakahara K, et al.: Follow-up study of thymomas with special reference
to their clinical stages. Cancer 48 (11): 2485-92, 1981. [PUBMED Abstract]
- Nakagawa K, Asamura
H, Matsuno Y, et al.: Thymoma: a clinicopathologic study based on the new
World Health Organization classification. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 126
(4): 1134-40, 2003. [PUBMED Abstract]
- Cameron RB, Loehrer
PJ Sr, Thomas CR Jr: Neoplasms of the mediastinum. In: DeVita VT Jr,
Hellman S, Rosenberg SA, eds.: Cancer: Principles and Practice of
Oncology. 7th ed. Philadelphia, Pa: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins,
2005, pp 845-58.
- Ritter JH, Wick MR:
Primary carcinomas of the thymus gland. Semin Diagn Pathol 16 (1): 18-31,
1999. [PUBMED Abstract]
- Blumberg D, Burt
ME, Bains MS, et al.: Thymic carcinoma: current staging does not predict
prognosis. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 115 (2): 303-8; discussion 308-9,
1998. [PUBMED Abstract]
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please leave your comments