Ellis K, Austin J H, Jaretzki A
Department of Radiology, Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center, New York, NY 10032.
AJR Am J Roentgenol. 1988 Nov;151(5):873-81. doi: 10.2214/ajr.151.5.873.
From 1973 through 1986, 154 consecutive patients who had a transsternal thymectomy for myasthenia gravis had preoperative radiologic evaluation for a possible thymoma. Examinations included posteroanterior and lateral (n = 154) and shallow oblique (n = 126) chest radiography, linear tomography (n = 80), and chest CT (n = 96). At surgery, a thymoma was found in 26 patients (17%). Plain film findings, which often were subtle, correctly predicted a thymoma in 15 (58%) of 26 patients. CT findings correctly predicted a thymoma in 17 of 20 patients (sensitivity, 85.0%; specificity, 98.7%; and accuracy, 95.8%). CT findings failed to detect a thymoma in three patients because a small tumor was indistinguishable from adjacent thymus (n = 2) and respirator motion artifacts (n = 1). Four (15%) of the tumors were invasive, and three (12%) were calcified. The likelihood of a thymoma increased with increasing age (3% for 20 years old and under, 12% for 21-45 years old, and 35% for 46 years old and older). In the youngest group, the thymus is densely cellular and normally relatively large, and therefore a small thymoma may be hidden. In patients 21-45 years old, partial fatty involution leaves parenchymal islands that can mimic a thymoma or obscure a small tumor. In patients over 45 years old, fatty involution enhances recognition of even small thymic tumors. For all patients with myasthenia gravis, we recommend that the initial chest radiographic examination include posteroanterior, lateral, and shallow (20 degrees) oblique views. For those patients under 21 years old, we recommend chest CT only when local symptoms, signs, or radiographic findings suggest the presence of thymic abnormality. For those patients 21 years old and older, we recommend routine chest CT.