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Title: [Epithelial tumours of the thymus]. Author: Thomas PA, Payan-Defais MJ. Journal: Rev Pneumol Clin; 2010 Feb; 66(1):41-51. PubMed ID: 20207296. Abstract: Epithelial tumours of the thymus include thymomas, thymic carcinomas and neuro-endocrine tumours. Rare, they nevertheless represent 20% of all mediastinal tumours and 50% of those located in the anterior mediastinum. Thymomas, in particular, can be associated to auto-immune disorders, among which predominates myasthenia gravis. Their clinical behaviour varies widely, from a relative indolence to the potential of lymph node and/or systematic metastases. However, even patients with an invasive disease may have a long clinical history, explaining that a 10-year or 20-year survival from diagnosis does not imply a definitive cure. In daily practice, both the clinical Masaoka's staging system and the WHO histological classification condition the treatment strategies and allow to anticipate the prognosis. The initial treatment, as well as that of the recurrence, is based mainly on a complete resection. Postoperative radiotherapy is systematically added to the treatment of invasive tumours and/or to those with an aggressive histological subtype. Inoperable or metastatic tumours require a cisplatine and anthracyclin-based chemotherapy, followed by radical surgery and/or radiotherapy.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]