Resection and heated pleural chemoperfusion in patients with thymic epithelial malignant disease and pleural spread: a single-institution experience.

2013 
Objective Our objective was to evaluate whether resection and heated pleural chemoperfusion (HPCP) is an effective treatment for de novo stage IVa thymoma (DNT) and thymic carcinoma (TC) and for thymoma with pleural relapse (TPR). Methods A retrospective study was conducted of patients undergoing resection and HPCP in 1 center. HPCP with cisplatinum ± doxorubicin (adriamycin) was performed for 60 minutes using a standard roller pump and a modified heat exchanger to a maximal intrapleural temperature of 43°C. Follow-up included at least 1 annual computed tomographic scan until death or March 2012. Results Thirty-five patients, 17 DNT, 14 TPR, and 4 TC, completed 42 intended treatments and were followed up for 4 to 202 months (median, 62 months). Seven patients had repeated HPCP at an interval of 2 to 12 years. There was no systemic toxicity. Ninety-day mortality was 2.5%. Major and minor morbidity occurred in 12% each. Five-, 10-, and 15-year overall survivals for DNT, TPR, and TC were 81%, 73%, 58% (DNT), 67%, 56%, 28% (TPR), and 0%, 0%, 0% (TC). Five- and 10-year progression-free survival was 61%, 43% for DNT and 48%, 18% for TPR. Presently, 11 of 17 DNT patients are alive (6, no evidence of disease), and 8 of 14 TPR are alive (6, no evidence of disease). Median survival for thymoma was 157 months. Overall survival was unrelated to any preoperative or intraoperative variable. Progression-free survival was improved in R0 compared with R1-2 resection ( P P  = .015). Conclusions (1) Lung-sparing resection and HPCP is feasible and safe. (2) In thymoma with pleural spread it offers excellent survival despite moderate pleural control. (3) Preliminary results with stage IVa TC are disappointing.
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