Multidisciplinary Treatment for Advanced Invasive Thymoma with Cisplatin, Doxorubicin, and Methylprednisolone

Advanced invasive thymomas are not usually manageable by surgical resection and radiotherapy. We reviewed our experience with a multidisciplinary approach and evaluated chemotherapy in the treatment of invasive thymoma. Seventeen consecutive patients with invasive thymoma were treated with multimoda...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of thoracic oncology 2007-01, Vol.2 (1), p.73-78
Hauptverfasser: Yokoi, Kohei, Matsuguma, Haruhisa, Nakahara, Rie, Kondo, Tetsuro, Kamiyama, Yukari, Mori, Kiyoshi, Miyazawa, Naoto
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Advanced invasive thymomas are not usually manageable by surgical resection and radiotherapy. We reviewed our experience with a multidisciplinary approach and evaluated chemotherapy in the treatment of invasive thymoma. Seventeen consecutive patients with invasive thymoma were treated with multimodality therapy consisting of chemotherapy, surgery, and/or radiotherapy. Four patients had stage III disease with superior vena cava invasion, nine had stage IVa disease, and four had stage IVb disease. The chemotherapy regimen consisted of cisplatin, doxorubicin, and methylprednisolone (CAMP). Chemotherapy was administered in a neoadjuvant setting to the 14 patients and in an adjuvant setting to the remaining three patients. Surgical resection was intended in all patients. After those treatments, chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy were performed. All but one of the 14 patients with induction chemotherapy responded to the CAMP therapy, and the response rate was 92.9%. Seven of these patients underwent complete remission after surgical resection and chemoradiotherapy, and the others underwent partial remission. All three patients treated with surgical resection and then chemotherapy with or without radiotherapy also achieved complete remission. Tumor progression after multimodality therapy occurred in 10 patients. After retreatment, eight of these patients were alive at the time of analysis, with a median survival time after recurrence of 30 months. The 5- and 10-year overall survival rates for all patients were both 80.7%. The major side effect of CAMP therapy was acceptable neutropenia. CAMP therapy was highly effective for invasive thymomas, and the multimodality therapy containing this chemotherapy brought about good disease control in the majority of patients. We believe that this multidisciplinary treatment with CAMP therapy, surgery, and radiotherapy is a justifiable initial treatment for patients with advanced invasive thymoma. Furthermore, appropriate treatments are essential for the long-term survival of patients with recurrences after multimodality therapy.
ISSN:1556-0864
1556-1380
DOI:10.1097/JTO.0b013e31802bafc8