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Published in: Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery 1/2023

Open Access 01-12-2023 | Thymoma | Research

Locally advanced thymoma; does neoadjuvant chemotherapy make a difference?

Authors: Riad Abdel Jalil, Farah A. Abdallah, Zeinab Obeid, Ahmad Khaled Harb, Mohamad K. Abou Chaar, Tariq Bassem Shannies, Ahed El-Edwan, Hussam Haddad, Azza Ghraibeh, Ahmad Abu-Shanab

Published in: Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery | Issue 1/2023

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Abstract

Background

Regardless of its rare occurrence, Thymoma remains the most frequently encountered primary tumor of the anterior mediastinum comprising about 50% of all masses in the region. Surgical resection, via thymectomy, remains the mainstay treatment modality. In locally advanced and borderline resectable tumors, neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) may be utilized to increase the chance of R0 resection, raising the question of its efficacy and safety.

Methods

Demographic and clinical data from patients who presented to a tertiary cancer center between January 2015–October 2021 with a diagnosis of thymoma and underwent curative surgical resection was collected. Computed tomography scan was used to delineate clinical staging, tumor size and to detect post-therapeutic variations in tumor burden. The response evaluation criteria in solid tumors (RECIST) was used to classify the effect of NACT on tumor burden. The pathological response was determined by measuring the percentage of necrotic tissue.

Results

A total of 23 patients were diagnosed with thymoma. Most patients were male with a mean age 46 (± 15) years at diagnosis. The most common clinical stage was stage II with 5 patients (22%). A total of 12 patients had NACT as compared to 11 patients who had upfront surgery. The mean change in tumor volume was 165 cm3 (p = 0.079) and the change in and maximum diameter was 1.53 ± 1.49 cm (p < 0.01). The effect of NACT on tumor burden based on RECIST criteria was minimal as 8 patients had stable disease. Based on pathological findings, the average necrotic portion of the tumor was 39.5% (p = 0.152). The overall survival rate is 95.65%, mean survival was 115 months (4–125). Recurrence occurred in 5 patients. The NACT group had a higher risk for recurrence (4; 33.3%) with a mean survival of 43.8 months compared to 59.6 months in those who did not receive induction therapy.

Conclusions

The exact role of induction chemotherapy in locally advanced thymoma patients remains controversial. NACT effect after utilizing radiological and pathological assessment tools was not found to significantly improve oncological outcomes compared to upfront surgery in locally advanced disease, with minimal radiologic and pathologic effect. To further demonstrate the impact of induction chemotherapy, we recommend multicentric collaborative studies.
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Metadata
Title
Locally advanced thymoma; does neoadjuvant chemotherapy make a difference?
Authors
Riad Abdel Jalil
Farah A. Abdallah
Zeinab Obeid
Ahmad Khaled Harb
Mohamad K. Abou Chaar
Tariq Bassem Shannies
Ahed El-Edwan
Hussam Haddad
Azza Ghraibeh
Ahmad Abu-Shanab
Publication date
01-12-2023
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery / Issue 1/2023
Electronic ISSN: 1749-8090
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13019-023-02357-4

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