Does the world health organization histological classification predict outcomes after thymomectomy? results of a multicentre study on 750 patients

  • Francesco Guerrera
  • , Erino Angelo Rendina
  • , Federico Venuta
  • , Stefano Margaritora
  • , Anna Maria Ciccone
  • , Pierluigi Novellis
  • , Domenico Novero
  • , Marco Anile
  • , Giulia Bora
  • , Ottavio Rena
  • , Caterina Casadio
  • , Alfredo Mussi
  • , Andrea Evangelista
  • , Enrico Ruffini
  • , Marco Lucchi
  • , Pier Luigi Filosso

Risultato della ricerca: Contributo su rivistaArticolo in rivistapeer review

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The World Health Organization (WHO) thymoma histological classification clinical value remains a controversy. In this study, we evaluated its prognostic significance in patients with thymoma treated with radical intent. METHODS: Six high-volume Italian Thoracic Surgery Institutions collaborated with their own retrospective anonymized datasets. Demographic, clinical, pathological and treatment data were examined. A WHO histological classification (WHO-HC) collapsed scheme (A/AB and B1/B2 types merged) was proposed and compared with the traditional one. Predictors of survival were assessed using a Cox model with shared frailty. Competing-risk regression models were performed to identify the association between individual factors and freedom from recurrence. RESULTS: Between 1990 and 2011, 750 thymomas were operated on in participating centres. Myasthenia gravis was observed in 363 (48%) patients. A complete resection was achieved in 676 (91%) cases. One hundred and nine patients (15%) had a WHO-HC A type, 166 (22%) AB, 179 (24%) B1, 158 (21%) B2 and 135 (18%) B3. The rate of 5-year OS and cumulative incidence of recurrence for all cases was 91% and 0.11, respectively. Five-year survival rates by WHO-HC in the collapsed scheme were A/AB 93%, early-B 90% and advanced-B 85%. Masaoka stage only was demonstrated to be an independent predictor for survival and recurrence. The WHO-collapsed scheme showed a trend in influencing recurrence overall survival development (hazard ratio: 1.32; P = 0.16). CONCLUSIONS: Our results show evidence of lack of significance by WHO-HC in influencing prognosis, even though the proposed collapsed scheme revealed a fair stratification of risk to relapses and better correlation with patients' clinical characteristics.

Lingua originaleInglese
pagine (da-a)48-54
Numero di pagine7
RivistaEuropean Journal of Cardio-thoracic Surgery
Volume48
Numero di pubblicazione1
DOI
Stato di pubblicazionePubblicato - 1 lug 2015

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