Discussion
Diagnosis With Brief Discussion
- Diagnosis
- Thymic Carcinoma with Intraluminal Growth to the Bilateral Branchiocephalic Veins, Azygos vein, SVC & RA
- Radiologic Findings
- Mediastinal windows of transverse contrast-enhanced chest CT scan show a heterogenously enhancing anterior mediastinal mass with lobulated contour & central necrosis. Also note the enhancing mass filled the lumen of bilateral brachiocephalic veins, azygos vein, superior vena cava (SVC) & right atrium.
- Brief Review
- Thymic tumors commonly invade the capsule and the adjacent organs. Local invasion occurs most commonly into the pleura (30%), pericardium (25%), lungs (8%), and recurrent laryngeal nerve (4%), but invasion into the intracardiac and great vessels is extremely rare (1). SVC obstruction is commonly caused by extrinsic compression of the tumor, but less commonly intraluminal growth to large vessels (2).
According to Koji et al (3), the thymic veins that drain the LBCV may be possible entrance routes of the tumor. The tumor cells might have entered through them and grown downstream to the RA with the blood flow.
- References
- 1. Filippone G, Savona I, Tomasello V, Guzzetta P, Zarcone N, Agate V. Radical excision of invasive thymoma with intracaval and intracardial extension: a successful case report. J Cardiovasc Surg (Torino). 1997;38:547-9.
2. Airan B, Sharma R, Iyer KS, Kalia PK, Singh MK, Shrivastava S, Rao IM. Malignant thymoma presenting as intracardiac tumor and superior vena caval obstruction. Ann Thorac Surg. 1990;50:989-91.
3. Yamazaki K, Takeo S, Takeshita M, Sugimachi K. Thymic carcinoma presenting as an intraluminal growth into the great vessels and the cardiac cavity. Ann Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2002;8:163-6.
- Keywords
- Mediastinum, Vascular, Malignant tumor,