Title: Anterior%20Mediastinal%20Masses
1Anterior Mediastinal Masses
- November 30, 2004
- Neil J. Fernandes, M.D.
2Anatomy of the Mediastinum
- Boundaries
- Superior- Thoracic inlet
- Inferior- Diaphragm
- Anterior- Sternum
- Posterior- Vertebral bodies
- Lateral- Pleura
3Anatomy of the Mediastinum
- Compartments
- Anterosuperior anterior to the pericardium,
extends superiorly to the thoracic inlet - Middle bounded by the pericardium and the
diaphragm - Posterior pericardial reflection to the
posterior border of the vertebral bodies,
diaphragm to first rib
4Anatomy of the Mediastinum
5Anatomy of the Mediastinum
- Normal Contents
- Anterosuperior thymus, extrapericardial aorta
and branches, IVC, SVC, lymphatic tissue - Middle heart, intrapericardial great vessels,
pulmonary hila, pericardium, trachea - Posterior esophagus, vagus nerves, thoracic
duct, sympathetic chain, descending thoracic
aorta, azygous venous system
6Mediastinal Masses
Compartment Malignant
Anterosuperior 59
Middle 29
Posterior 16
7Anterosuperior Masses
- Thymus
- Mediastinal Lymphoma
- Germ Cell Tumor
- Thyroid/Parathyroid
8Thymus
- Thymoma
- Thymic carcinoma
- Thymic carcinoid
- Thymolipoma
9Thymoma
- Presentation
- Most common primary anterior mediastinal tumor
- MF, most gt40
- Most patients are asymptomatic
- Half of patients suffer have associated
parathymic syndromes - myasthenia gravis
- hypogammaglobulinemia
- pure red cell aplasia
10Thymoma
- Pathology
- Histologically benign lymphoepithelial neoplasms
- Solid, surrounded by a fibrous capsule
- Up to 1/3 have necrosis, hemorrhage or cysts
- Up to 1/3 are invasive into mediastinal fat,
pleura, pericardium, great vessels, heart and
lung - Although they may seed the pleural space, pleural
effusions are rare - Lymphatic and hematogenous metastases are rare
11Thymoma
- Radiology
- Well-defined, rounded/lobular, mass arising from
the thymus - May give rise to pleural implants, rarely
associated with effusions - CT evaluation should evaluate the lung apices
through the diaphragm to evaluate for vascular
invasion and to rule out intrathoracic metastases
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14Thymoma
- Treatment
- Complete surgical excision if possible
- Histologic evidence of tumor cells outside the
capsule defines invasive thymoma - XRT for incompletely resected or invasive tumor
- Chemotherapy has been attempted for metastatic or
recurrent thymoma with cisplatin, doxorubicin and
cyclophosphamide. In one study of 29 patients
there were 3 CR, 12 PR and a median 5 year
survival of 30
5 year survival 10 year survival
Encapsulated 75 63
Invasive 50 30
15Thymic Carcinoma
- Presentation
- MgtF, 40s
- Pathology
- Cytologic features of malignancy
- Early local invasion, widespread lymphatic and
hematogenous metastases - Radiology
- Large, poorly defined, infiltrative, associated
with pleural and pericardial effusions - Pleural implants are uncommon
- Treatment
- Etoposide/cisplatin XRT
- 5-year survival ranges from 15 to 90 depending
on grade
16Thymic Carcinoid
- Presentation
- Men, 4th/5th decade
- Rarely associated with carcinoid syndrome
- Associated endocrine abnormalities Cushings
syndrome due to ectopic ACTH or MEN - 73 have regional lymph node and/or distant
osteoblastic bone mets - Pathology
- Histologically identical to carcinoid tumor at
other sites - Radiology
- Vascular, large, lobulated, invasive
- May have areas of hemorrhage and necrosis
- Punctate, dystrophic calcification
- Treatment
- Complete surgical excision
- Local invasion, mets to regional lymph nodes and
distant mets have been treated with chemotherapy
and XRT, but with poor results
17Thymolipoma
- Presentation
- MF, occurs over a wide age range, median age 27
- Most are asymptomatic
- Pathology
- Mature adipose cells and thymic tissue
- Radiology
- Large, soft, encapsulated
- May fall into the anteroinferior mediastinum
mimicking cardiomegaly or elevated hemidiaphragm - CT demonstrates a combination of fat and soft
tissue densities within an encapsulated mass - Treatment
- Surgical excision curative
18Anterosuperior Masses
- Thymus
- Thymoma
- Thymic carcinoma
- Thymic carcinoid
- Thymolipoma
- Mediastinal Lymphoma
- Germ Cell Tumor
- Thyroid/Parathyroid
19Primary Mediastinal Lymphoma
- 5-10 of patients with lymphoma present with
primary mediastinal lesions - Primary mediastinal lymphoma represents 10-20 of
primary mediastinal masses in adults and are
usually in the anterosuperior compartment - Usually present with fever, weight loss and night
sweats - Pain, dyspnea, stridor, SVC syndrome due to mass
effects are uncommon
20Primary Mediastinal Lymphoma
- Two Types
- Primary Mediastinal Hodgkins Lymphoma
- Primary Mediastinal Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma
- Poorly differentiated lymphoblastic
- Diffuse lymphocytic
- Primary Mediastinal B-cell Lymphoma
21Primary Mediastinal Hodgkins Lymphoma
- Presentation
- Incidental mediastinal mass on chest xray is the
2nd most common presentation after asymptomatic
lymphadenopathy - Mass is usually large, rarely causes retrosternal
chest pain, cough, dyspnea, effusions or SVC
syndrome - Bimodal age distribution maintained, however,
first peak is larger in patients with mediastinal
involvement - B symptoms fever, weight loss (gt10 body wt in
6 months), night sweats - Generalized pruritus may precede the diagnosis by
up to a year and, if severe, is a negative
prognostic indicator - EtOH-induced pain, most common in nodular
sclerosing subtype
22Primary Mediastinal Hodgkins Lymphoma
- Radiology
- Multiple rounded masses (lymph nodes)
- Mediastinal nodal groups prevascular,
aortopulmonary, paratracheal, pretracheal,
subcarinal, posterior mediastinal - Hilar nodes are considered separately
- Dominant mass (nodal coalescence)
- Thymic mass
- May be associated with infiltration and
displacement of mediastinal structures and/or
extranodal extension into the sternum, chest
wall, pleura, pericardium or lung - Usually homogenous attenuation on CT, but large
masses may have necrosis, hemorrhage or cysts
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25Modified Ann Arbor Staging for Hodgkins Lymphoma
Definition Treatment Cure
1 Single node region/lymphoid structure or extralymphatic site XRT gt90
2 2 node regions and/or extranodal organs on the same side of the diaphragm XRT 90
3 Node regions on both sides of the diaphragm and/or splenic involvement or contiguous involvement of an extranodal site Chemo XRT A 80-90 B 60-70
4 Diffuse or disseminated involvement of extranodal organs/tissues /- node involvement Chemo XRT 50-60
26Primary Mediastinal Non-Hodgkins
Lymphoma
- Lymphocytic Lymphoma
- Median age at presentation is 55, slight male
predominance - Advanced disease at presentation with
constitutional symptoms, generalized
lymphadenopathy /- extranodal disease
27Primary Mediastinal Non-Hodgkins
Lymphoma
- Lymphoblastic Lymphoma
- 1st/2nd decade, MgtF
- Aggressive, high grade
- Often present as a rapidly enlarging mediastinal
mass which may cause compression of mediastinal
contents - Similar to ALL
28Primary Mediastinal Non-Hodgkins
Lymphoma
- Primary Mediastinal B-cell Lymphoma
- 3rd decade, FgtM
- Presents as a rapidly expanding mediastinal mass
which may invade the airway, chest wall and/or
adjacent structures. - Extrathoracic involvement is uncommon
- Originally classified as a separate category due
to its poor prognosis
29Anterosuperior Masses
- Thymus
- Thymoma
- Thymic carcinoma
- Thymic carcinoid
- Thymolipoma
- Mediastinal Lymphoma
- Hodgkins Lymphoma
- Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma
- Poorly differentiated lymphoblastic
- Diffuse lymphocytic
- Primary Mediastinal B-cell Lymphoma
- Germ Cell Tumor
- Thyroid/Parathyroid
30Mediastinal Germ Cell Tumors
- Represent 10-15 of adult anterosuperior
mediastinal tumors - Account for up to 10 of all germ cell tumors in
men - Arise from primordial germ cells which are
displaced during embryogenesis as they migrate
along the dorsal mesentery to the genital ridges - Usually occur in young adults, median age 27
31Mediastinal Germ Cell Tumors
- Three types
- Teratoma
- Seminoma
- Nonseminomatous Germ Cell Tumor
32Mediastinal Teratomas
- Most common mediastinal germ cell tumor
- Three types
- Mature benign, well-differentiated
- Immature contains gt50 immature components, may
recur or metastasize - Malignant a mature teratoma that contains a
focus of carcinoma, sarcoma or malignant GCT
33Mature Teratoma
- Occurs in children and young adults
- Usually asymptomatic, but if large enough, may
cause chest pain, dyspnea, cough or other
symptoms of mediastinal compression - Contains derivatives of all three primitive germ
layers including - Ectoderm teeth, skin, hair
- Mesoderm cartilage and bone
- Endoderm bronchial, intestinal and pancreatic
tissue - Expectoration of hair (trichoptysis) is rare but
pathognomonic - Surgical excision is curative
34Mature Teratoma
- Radiology
- Large
- Rounded to lobulated, well-defined
- Protrude to one side
- 26 include calcifications
- On CT, multilocular/cystic with fluid, soft
tissue, calcium and fat densities
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37Immature Teratoma
- Rare
- Similar presentation to mature teratomas
- Composed of at least 2 out of 3 germinal layers
and gt50 immature elements - Treated with radical resection
- The roles of neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant
chemotherapy are undefined
38Mediastinal Seminoma
- General
- Represents 40 of malignant mediastinal GCTs
- Afflicts Caucasian men in 20s-30s
- Only rarely represents a metastatic lesion from a
testicular primary tumor, but testicular US is
usually performed to rule this out - If any other germ cell tumor histology is
identified in the tumor, it is treated as a mixed
NSGCT - AFP normal, ?-HCG may be elevated in 10
39Mediastinal Seminoma
- Presentation
- Slow growing tumor, usually symptomatic at
diagnosis - Commonly presents with chest pain, dyspnea,
cough, weight loss - Presents infrequently with SVC syndrome
- Bulky, lobulated, homogeneous mass, no
calcifications - Usually not invasive, but many have metastasized
to regional lymph nodes, lung and/or bone by the
time of diagnosis
40Mediastinal Seminoma
- Treatment
- Chemo and XRT sensitive tumors
- Small tumors are treated with primary resection
followed by XRT - Advanced tumors are treated with XRT and/or four
cycles of bleomycin, etoposide and cisplatin - Treatment followed by surveillance of residual
tumor lt 3 cm. or resection of residual tumor gt 3
cm. - Long-term survival is 60-80
41Mediastinal Nonseminomatous Germ Cell Tumors
- Five Types
- Embryonal cell carcinoma
- Endodermal sinus tumor elevated AFP
- Choriocarcinoma elevated ?-HCG
- Malignant Teratoma
- Mixed
42Mediastinal Nonseminomatous Germ Cell Tumors
- NSGCTs of the mediastinum have a worse prognosis
than mediastinal seminomas or teratomas - Occur in men in the 20-40 age group
- 20 of patients also have Klinefelters syndrome
- Also associated with i(12p)
43Mediastinal Nonseminomatous Germ Cell Tumors
- Associated with hematologic disorders, including,
- Megakaryoblastic leukemia
- Myelodysplasia
- Malignant mastocytosis
- Malignant histiocytosis
- Malignant hematologic cells often have the same
i(12p) lesion identified in the mediastinal tumor - Occasionally hematopoietic cells in the yolk sac
portion of the tumor will have an
immunohistochemical profile identical to
malignant cells in the bone marrow
44Mediastinal Nonseminomatous Germ Cell Tumors
- Presentation
- Common symptoms at presentation include fever,
chills, weight loss, chest pain, dyspnea, SVC
syndrome - Patients with choriocarcinoma and high levels of
?-hCG may have gynecomastia - Most have elevated AFP and/or ?-hCG and the
combination of elevated tumor markers in a young
male with a mediastinal mass may be used as an
indication to begin treatment, even prior to a
pathologic diagnosis
45Mediastinal Nonseminomatous Germ Cell Tumors
- Radiology
- Large, irregular
- Extensive areas of heterogeneous low attenuation
on CT due to necrosis, hemorrhage and/or cyst
formation - May invade the chest wall or adjacent structures
- Metastasizes to regional lymph nodes and distant
sites - Pleural and pericardial effusions are common
46Mediastinal Nonseminomatous Germ Cell Tumors
- Treatment
- Four cycles BEP (bleomycin, etoposide, cisplatin)
/- XRT - Residual masses are resected and two more cycles
of chemotherapy given if malignant cells are
found - AFP and ?-hCG should be monitored to evaluate the
effect of treatment and for recurrence
47Anterosuperior Masses
- Thymus
- Thymoma
- Thymic carcinoma
- Thymic carcinoid
- Thymolipoma
- Mediastinal Lymphoma
- Hodgkins Lymphoma
- Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma
- Poorly differentiated lymphoblastic
- Diffuse lymphocytic
- Primary Mediastinal B-cell Lymphoma
- Germ Cell Tumor
- Teratoma
- Mature
- Immature
- Seminoma
- Nonseminomatous Germ Cell
- Embryonal cell carcinoma
- Endodermal sinus tumor
- Choriocarcinoma
- Malignant teratoma
- Mixed
- Thyroid/Parathyroid
48Mediastinal Goiter
- A goiter is an enlargement of the thyroid gland
- The inferior poles of the thyroid normally lie
superior to the thoracic inlet - A minority of people may have thyroid glands that
have descended to the level of the thoracic inlet - Enlarging thyroid masses generally grow
anteriorly as they are limited only by thin
muscles, subcutaneous tissue and skin - Growth through the thoracic inlet can produce
symptoms related to compression of normal
thoracic inlet contents
49Mediastinal Goiter
- The Thoracic Inlet
- 5x10 cm ovoid area
- Anterior Sternum
- Posterior T1 vertebral body
- Lateral First ribs
- Contains trachea, esophagus, carotid arteries,
jugular veins, nerves
50Mediastinal Goiter
- Presentation
- Visible cervical goiter
- Dyspnea - exertional, positional, nocturnal. May
have stridor if tracheal compression is severe - Cough/Choking sensation
- Dysphagia - especially if goiter is posterior
- Hoarseness
- Diaphragmatic paralysis
- Horners syndrome
- Venous compression
- Hyperthyroidism - occurs in about 20, usually
subclinical
51Mediastinal Goiter
- Physical Exam
- Visible cervical goiter - present in 77-90
- Inability to identify inferior pole of thyroid by
palpation, even with neck hyperextension - Tracheal deviation
- Pembertons maneuver
- Hold patients arms above head for 60 sec
- Positive test indicated by distended neck veins,
facial plethora, cyanosis, inability to swallow,
worsening of dyspnea or stridor - May rarely result in impaction of goiter in
thoracic inlet (Thyroid cork phenomenon)
52Mediastinal Goiter
- Diagnostic Studies
- Plain films
- May demonstrate tracheal narrowing and/or
deviation with widening of the mediastinum
superiorly - Nuclear Medicine
- Radionuclide imaging with 123-I will help to
define areas of autonomous functioning tissue - May be misleading if mediastinal extension of the
mass is hypofunctioning - Pulmonary Function Tests
- Flow-volume loops demonstrate fixed upper airway
obstruction - Fine Needle Aspiration
- Indicated to evaluate for cancer if prominent
discrete nodules are present or if there is a
history of rapid growth, pain/tenderness, or
firmness in one region
53Mediastinal Goiter
- Diagnostic Studies, cont.
- CT
- Encapsulated, lobular heterogeneous mass
- Heterogeneity is due to cysts, hemorrhage and
locally elevated concentrations of iodine - Coarse punctate or ring-like calcifications are
common - Useful to show continuity between the cervical
and mediastinal portions of the mass - CT is usually performed with the neck
neutral/flexed. If the goiter extends lt1.5 cm
below the sternal notch it may be completely
cervical on extension and thus less likely to be
the cause of the patients symptom - If iodinated contrast is given, the patient
should be pre-treated with methimazole or another
anti-thyroid agent to reduce exacerbation of
hyperthyroidism
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56Mediastinal Goiter
- Pathology
- Most are benign
- Multinodular goiter and large follicular adenoma
account for 95 - Large multinodular goiters have little
functioning tissue. Usually have cystic
degeneration, fibrosis, calcification, hemorrhage - Many are found to have areas of papillary thyroid
cancer
57Mediastinal Goiter
- Treatment
- Medical management of hyperthyroidism with
antithyroid medications and ?-blocker - Early surgical resection
- Most goiters continue to enlarge
- As patient ages surgical complications become
more common - Difficult to rule out malignancy in mediastinal
portion of tumor - Risk of hemorrhage into mass causing acute airway
compression - Resection can usually be performed through a
single cervical incision, but massive tumors may
require sternotomy
58Mediastinal Goiter
- Treatment, cont.
- Levothyroxine (suppressive dose)
- May reduce size of multinodular goiter over time
- Only helpful in patients who are euthyroid
- Patients with minimal mediastinal involvement, no
compressive symptoms or patients who are poor
surgical candidates may benefit - Radioactive Iodine
- May be useful in patients who are poor surgical
candidates, if mediastinal thyroid tissue is
functional - Radiation thyroiditis may worsen compressive
symptoms
59Parathyroid Adenoma
- Accounts for 85 of primary hyperparathyroidism
- Occurs in middle-aged adults, 21 FM ratio
- Presents with
- Asymptomatic hypercalcemia
- Nephrolithiasis
- Bone pain
- Arthralgias/Myalgias
- Peptic ulcer disease
- Pancreatitis
- Fatigue/Anxiety/Depression
60Parathyroid Adenoma
- Embryology/Anatomy
- Superior parathyroids are derived from the 4th
pharyngeal pouch and lie posterior to the upper
poles of the thyroid - Inferior parathyroids are derived from the 3rd
pharyngeal pouch and usually lie near the lateral
surface of the lower poles of the thyroid - Up to 20 of patients have ectopic parathyroid
glands - The inferior parathyroids may lie anywhere along
the path of descent of the thymus
61Parathyroid Adenoma
- Radiology
- Dual-phase 99mTc-sestamibi imaging
- The radiopharmaceutical is taken up within
minutes of injection by both the thyroid and
parathyroid glands. - The rate of washout from normal thyroid tissue is
much faster than the rate from parathyroid
adenoma - Early (10-15 min.) and Late (1.5-3 hr.) images of
the neck and mediastinum are obtained and
compared - False-positives may occur with thyroid nodules or
in parathyroid hyperplasia with one dominant
gland - False-negative studies can occur with very small
lesions or abnormally rapid parathyroid washout
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66Parathyroid Adenoma
- Treatment
- Surgical removal
- bilateral neck exploration
- unilateral neck exploration
- minimally invasive, image-guided
parathyroidectomy - US-guided EtOH ablation
- Embolization
67Anterosuperior Masses
- Thymus
- Thymoma
- Thymic carcinoma
- Thymic carcinoid
- Thymolipoma
- Mediastinal Lymphoma
- Hodgkins Lymphoma
- Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma
- Poorly differentiated lymphoblastic
- Diffuse lymphocytic
- Primary Mediastinal B-cell Lymphoma
- Germ Cell Tumor
- Teratoma
- Mature
- Immature
- Seminoma
- Nonseminomatous Germ Cell
- Embryonal cell carcinoma
- Endodermal sinus tumor
- Choriocarcinoma
- Malignant teratoma
- Mixed
- Thyroid/Parathyroid
- Goiter
- Parathyroid adenoma
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