| Literature DB >> 35118233 |
Samantha S Sigurdson1, Anja C Roden2, Edith M Marom3, Frank C Detterbeck4, Conrad B Falkson1.
Abstract
The International Thymic Malignancy Interest Group (ITMIG) has periodic tumor board meetings to discuss challenging cases. The case of a pediatric thymoma from the April 2018 meeting is discussed in this article. Radiology imaging and pathology slides are reviewed. Treatment and surveillance recommendations are discussed, as well as lessons learned from group discussion. 2019 Mediastinum. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Mediastinal mass; case presentation; pediatric thymoma; tumor board
Year: 2019 PMID: 35118233 PMCID: PMC8794336 DOI: 10.21037/med.2019.01.03
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mediastinum ISSN: 2522-6711
Figure 1Contrast enhanced chest CT at presentation. (A) Axial image at the level of the main pulmonary artery [p] reveals a prevascular mass (white arrows) replacing the left lobe of the thymus with a low attenuation center. (B) There is a dense 2 mm calcification (black arrow) at the periphery of this mass.
Figure 2Resection specimen of thymic mass. (A) The mass is comprised of cellular lobules with a mixture of large epithelioid neoplastic cells and small thymocytes, intersected by thick fibrous bands. These morphologic features are consistent with a WHO type B2 thymoma. The thymoma invades into surrounding adipose tissue (upper right-hand side). (B) Focally there are only scattered clusters of CK19-positive epithelial cells (arrows) (CK19 immunostaining, insert) which are present at the blue-inked margin (arrowhead). Magnification ×40, H&E (A,B).