Copyright
©The Author(s) 2021.
World J Clin Oncol. Apr 24, 2021; 12(4): 195-216
Published online Apr 24, 2021. doi: 10.5306/wjco.v12.i4.195
Published online Apr 24, 2021. doi: 10.5306/wjco.v12.i4.195
Table 1 Levels of evidence and grades of recommendation
Levels of evidence | |
I | Evidence from at least one large RCT of good methodological quality (low potential for bias) or meta-analyses of well-conducted randomised trials without heterogeneity |
II | Small or large RCTs with suspicion of bias (lower methodological quality) or meta-analyses of such trials with demonstrated heterogeneity |
III | Prospective cohort studies |
IV | Retrospective cohort studies or case-control studies |
V | Studies without control group, case reports, expert opinions |
Grades of recommendation | |
A | Strong evidence for efficacy with a substantial benefit, strongly recommended |
B | Strong or moderate evidence for efficacy but with a limited clinical benefit, generally recommended |
C | Insufficient evidence for efficacy or benefit does not outweigh the risk or the disadvantages (adverse events, costs, etc.), optional |
D | Moderate evidence against efficacy or for adverse outcome, generally not recommended |
E | Strong evidence against efficacy or for adverse outcome, never recommended |
Table 2 Characteristic clinical manifestation of thymomas and differential diagnosis with other causes of mediastinal masses
Speed of development | Associated clinical manifestations | Characteristic signs | |
Thymoma | Long course or indolent | Compressive symptoms: Chest pain, dyspnea, dysphagia, vena cava syndrome | Laboratory abnormalities: Anti-acetylcholine receptor antibodies (common if associated with MG), hypogammaglobulinemia, erythropenia, pancytopenia |
Neurological autoimmune disorders: MG, myotonic dystrophy, limbic encephalitis, peripheral neuropathy | |||
Hematologic autoimmune disorders: Red-cell aplasia, pernicious anemia, erythrocytosis, pancytopenia | |||
Thymic carcinoma | Rapid growth | Collagen autoimmune disorders: Systemic lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis, Sjogren's syndrome, scleroderma | PET-CT: Thymoma types A, AB, B1-2: Low uptake. |
Endocrine disorders: Multiple endocrine neoplasia, Cushing's syndrome, thyroiditis | PET-CT: Type B3 thymoma and thymic carcinoma: High uptake, with loss of bilobar structure of the thymus | ||
Autoimmune deficiencies: Hypogammaglobulinemia, T-cell deficiency | |||
Lymphoma | Fulminant onset | Dermatological disorders: Pemphigus, Lichen planus | Elevated LDH |
“B” symptoms: Fever, weight loss, sweating | |||
Teratoma | Slow development | Lymphadenopathy. Asymptomatic or compressive symptoms of long duration | CT: Heterogeneous mass, with cystic component and fat/calcifications |
Germ cell tumors | Rapid development | Testicular mass | Seminoma: Elevated beta-HCG |
No seminoma: Elevated beta-HCG and AFP | |||
Thymic hyperplasia | Indolent | Asymptomatic | PET-CT: Elevated uptake in mass that maintains the thymic bilobar structure |
Table 3 Diagnostic criteria of thymomas in the 2015 World Health Organization classification of thymic tumors
Thymoma subtype | Obligatory criteria | Optional criteria |
Type A | Occurrence of bland, spindle-shaped epithelial cells (at least focally); paucity1 or absence of immature (TdT+) T cells throughout the tumor | Polygonal epithelial cells; CD20+ epithelial cells |
Atypical type A variant | Criteria of type A thymoma; in addition, comedo-type tumor necrosis; increased mitotic count (> 4/2 mm2); nuclear crowding | Polygonal epithelial cells; CD20+ epithelial cells |
Type AB | Occurrence of bland, spindle-shaped epithelial cells (at least focally); abundance of immature (TdT+) T cells focally or throughout tumor | Polygonal epithelial cells; CD20+ epithelial cells |
Type B1 | Thymus-like architecture and cytology: Abundance of immature T cells, areas of medullary differentiation (medullary islands); paucity of polygonal or dendritic epithelia cells without clustering (i.e., < 3 contiguous epithelial cells) | Hassall’s corpuscles; perivascular spaces |
Type B2 | Increased numbers of single or clustered polygonal or dendritic epithelial cells intermingled with abundant immature T cells | Medullary islands; Hassall’s corpuscles; perivascular spaces |
Type B3 | Sheets of polygonal slightly to moderately atypical epithelial cells; absent or rare intercellular bridges; paucity or absence of intermingled TdT+ T cells | Hassall’s corpuscles; perivascular spaces |
MNT | Nodules of bland spindle or oval epithelial cells surrounded by an epithelial cell-free lymphoid stroma lymphoid stroma | Lymphoid follicles; monoclonal B cells and/or plasma cells (rare) |
Metaplasticthymoma | Biphasic tumor composed of solid areas of epithelial cells in a background of bland-looking spindle cells; absence of immature T cells | Pleomorphism of epithelial cells; actin, keratin, or EMA-positive spindle cells |
Rare others2 |
Table 4 Clinical stage of thymic epithelial tumours according to Masaoka-Koga
Stage | Diagnostic criteria | 10-yr survival |
I | Tumours encapsulated macroscopically and microscopically (without capsular invasion) | 84% (81%-86%) |
II | A: Microscopic transcapsular invasion | 83% (79%-87%) |
B: Macroscopic invasion of fatty tissue or pleural and/or pericardial adhesion | ||
III | Macroscopic involvement of adjacent structures (pericardium, great vessels, or lung). A: With invasion of great vessels | 70% (64%-75%) |
B: Without invasion of great vessels | ||
IV | A: Pleural or pericardial spread | 42% (26%-58%) |
B: Hematogenous or lymphogenic metastasis | 53% (32%-73%) |
Table 5 Clinical stage of thymic epithelial tumours: International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer/International Thymic Malignancy Interest Group tumor-node-metastasis
Stage | Description | |
Primary tumor (T) | ||
T1 | T1a | Encapsulated or unencapsulated, with or without extension into mediastinal fat |
T1b | Extension into mediastinal pleura | |
T2 | Direct invasion of the pericardium (partial or full thickness) | |
T3 | Direct invasion of the lung, brachiocephalic vein, superior vena cava, chest wall, phrenic nerveand/or hilar (extrapericardial) pulmonary vessels | |
T4 | Direct invasion of the aorta, main pulmonary artery, myocardium, trachea, or esophagus | |
Lymph nodes (N) | ||
N0 | No nodal involvement | |
N1 | Anterior (perithymic) lymph nodes (IASLC levels 1, 3a, 6 and/or supradiaphragmatic/inferior phrenic/pericardial) | |
N2 | Deep cervical or intrathoracic nodes (IASLC levels 2, 4, 5, 7, 10 and/or internal mammary nodes) | |
Distant metastasis (M) | ||
M0 | No pleural, pericardial, or distant metastases | |
M1 | M1a | Pleural or pericardial nodules |
M1b | Pulmonary intraparenchymal nodule or distant organ metastasis | |
TNM stage | MASOKA-KOGA stage | |
I | T1N0M0 | I, IIA, IIB, III |
II | T2N0M0 | III |
IIIA | T3N0M0 | III |
IIIB | T4N0M0 | III |
IVA | Any T, N0-1, M0-1a | IVA, IVB |
IVB | Any T, N0-2, M0-1b | IVB |
Table 6 Most commonly used chemotherapy regimens for thymic carcinoma
Scheme | Drugs |
ADOC | Doxorubicin + Cisplatin + Vincristine + Cyclophosphamide |
CAP | Cisplatin + Doxorubicin + Cyclophosphamide |
PE | Cisplatin + Etoposide |
VIP | Etoposide + Ifosfamide + Cisplatin |
CODE | Cisplatin + Vincristine + Doxorubicin + Etoposide |
Carbo-Px | Carboplatin + Paclitaxel |
CAP-GEM | Capecitabine + Gemcitabine |
Table 7 Constraints to the main organs
Organ | Constraints | ||
Spinal cord | Dmax < 45 Gy | ||
Dmax < 40 Gy if 3 Gy/fraction | |||
Lung (total lung minus GTV; solely total lung for postoperative cases without GTV) | Mean dose < 20 Gy | ||
Mean dose < 8 Gy if post-pneumonectomy | |||
RT alone | RT with chemotherapy | Neoadjuvant treatment before surgery | |
V20 ≤ 40% | V20 ≤ 35% | V20 ≤ 30% | |
V10 ≤ 45% | V10 ≤ 40% | ||
V5 ≤ 65% | V5 ≤ 55% | ||
V20 < 10% and V5 < 60% if post-pneumonectomy | |||
Heart | Mean dose < 26 Gy | ||
V30 ≤ 45% | |||
Esophagus | Mean dose < 34 Gy | ||
Dmax ≤ 80 Gy | |||
V70 < 20% | |||
V50 < 50% | |||
Kidney | 20 Gy < 32% bilateral kidney | ||
Liver | Mean dose < 30 Gy | ||
V30 ≤ 40% |
- Citation: Rico M, Flamarique S, Casares C, García T, López M, Martínez M, Serrano J, Blanco M, Hernanz R, de Ingunza-Barón L, Marcos FJ, Couñago F. GOECP/SEOR radiotherapy guidelines for thymic epithelial tumours. World J Clin Oncol 2021; 12(4): 195-216
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/2218-4333/full/v12/i4/195.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.5306/wjco.v12.i4.195