1. MEDIASTINAL TUMOURS
Thymoma
- A primary anterior mediastinal tumour, well circumscribed mass
- Most common 30-50 year olds; rare in children
- Histology – mixture of epithelial cells and mature lymphocytes
Clinical features
- Can be asymptomatic
- Large tumours cause symptoms of mass effect – chest pain, dyspnea, haemoptysis, cough, superior vena cava syndrome
Associated conditions
- Myasthenia gravis – patients have circulating antibodies to acetylcholine receptor
- Red cell aplasia
- SLE
Treatment
- Surgical resection – complete excision of tumour with total thymectomy
Thymic carcinoma
- Can be low-grade or high-grade
- Have a propensity for early invasion and metastasis – often leads to malignant pleural and pericardial effusion
- Poor prognosis
- Complete resection can increased survival but thymic carcinomas have a tendency to recur
- Post-operative radiation and chemotherapy can be given
Neurogenic tumours
Nerve sheath tumour
- Neurilemoma/schwannomas
- Arise from Schwann cells – generally benign
- Two types – Antoni A and Antoni B
- Can lead to cord compression and paralysis if the tumour extends into intervertebral foramen
- Treatment – resection
- Neurofibroma
- Most are benign, but some can degenerate into malignant neurofibrosarcoma
- Associated with neurofibromatosis type 1 – autosomal dominant condition characterised by brown spots on the eyes, neurofibromas, scoliosis, learning disabilities, café au lait spots and epilepsy
- Treatment – resection
Ganglion cell tumours
- Ganglioneuroma
- Well differentiated, benign tumour
- Patients are normally asymptomatic – diagnosis is usually made incidentally
- Treatment – complete resection
- Ganglioneuroblastoma
- Histology – mixture of benign ganglion cells and malignant neuroblasts
- Two patterns
- Nodular – high incidence of metastasis
- Diffuse – rarely metastasises
- Most common in infants and children <3 years old
- Treatment – resection (good prognosis)
- Neuroblastoma
- Very malignant
- Most common in children under 2 years old
- Treatment – resection and chemotherapy
Lymphoma
- Most common malignancy of the mediastinum – anterior compartment is usually involved
- Two main types – Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphoma
- Can occur in the lymph nodes, spleen, thymus or bone marrow
- Clinical features – fever, weight loss, night sweats, pain, dyspnea
- Early stage Hodgkin lymphoma has a good response to chemotherapy and/or radiation
Mediastinal germ cell tumours
- Germ cell tumours are more commonly gonadal in origin – less than 5% occur as a primary mediastinal tumour
Teratoma – most common type
- Most common in children/young adults. Usually asymptomatic
- Contain two or three embryonic layers
- Ectoderm – teeth, skin, hair
- Mesoderm – cartilage, bone
- Endoderm – bronchial, intestinal or pancreatic tissue
- Treatment – surgical resection has excellent prognosis
- Teratocarcinoma (malignant version) is usually unresectable and has a poor prognosis
Seminoma
- Most common in young Caucasian men
- Slow growing, bulky tumour, can produce effects of local compression – superior vena cava syndrome, dyspnea, chest discomfort
- Treatment
- Chemotherapy (cisplatin, bleomycin, etoposide) – good response rate
- Surgical resection
Non-seminomatous germ cell tumour
- Types
- Embryonal cell carcinoma
- Endodermal sinus tumour – ↑AFP
- Choriocarcinoma – ↑hCG
- Most common in the anterior mediastinum
- Frequently metastasise to regional lymph nodes, pleura and lungs
- Treatment
- Chemotherapy is preferred – cisplatin, bleomycin, etoposide
- Followed by surgical resection
2. MEDIASTINAL CYSTS
- Most commonly occur in the middle mediastinum; CT scan is usually diagnostic
Pericardial cyst
- Usually asymptomatic – found incidentally
- Located in the right costophrenic angle
- Cysts are lined with a layer of mesothelial cells and contain clear fluid
Treatment
- Asymptomatic cysts – observation
- Symptomatic cysts – surgical resection or aspiration
Bronchogenic cyst
- Developmental anomaly that occurs due to abnormal budding of the tracheobronchial tree
- Cysts are line with respiratory epithelium and contain a protein rich mucoid material with smooth muscle and cartilage
Clinical features
- Most cases are asymptomatic when found incidentally, but can eventually cause symptoms
- Chest pain, cough, dyspnea, fever
- Complications – airway obstruction, infection, rupture, fistula
Treatment
- Asymptomatic cysts – observation
- Symptomatic/large/infected cyst – complete removal of cyst
Oesophageal duplication cyst
- They are a congenital malformation and occur due to aberrant division of the dorsal foregut
- Cysts are lined by gastric epithelium which has a tendency to cause serious complications – haemorrhage, infection, perforation
- They should always be removed even if they are asymptomatic
- Treatment – surgical resection
Ectopic endocrine glands
- Around 5% of all mediastinal masses are of thyroid origin
- Most are non-toxic and can be completely resected
- Parathyroid cysts can also be found in the mediastinum – associated with hyperparathyroidism
- Can cause pressure symptoms – airway obstruction, recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy
- Treatment – surgical excision
3. MEDIASTINAL EMPHYSEMA
- Presence of gas in the mediastinum
Etiology
- Chest trauma – blunt or penetrating
- Iatrogenic – secondary to neck or thoracic surgery
- Oesophageal perforation
- Tracheobronchial perforation
- Asthma
- Infection – tuberculosis, mediastinitis
- Barotraumas – diving, ventilator
- Connective tissue disorder – polymyositis/dermatomyositis
Clinical features
- Severe central chest pain, shortness of breath
- Subcutaneous emphysema – affecting face, neck, chest
Investigations
- Chest XR
- CT
Treatment
- Most cases require conservative treatment – high flow oxygen
- Drainage – to prevent cardiac tamponade
- Surgery – to repair
4. SUPERIOR VENA CAVA SYNDROME
- Superior vena cava (SVC) is a thin walled/low pressure vessel – makes it vulnerable to extrinsic compression and obstruction
Etiology
- Malignant tumours that compress the SVC – most common cause
- Lung carcinoma
- Lymphoma
- Vascular diseases – aortic aneurysm, vasculitis
- Mediastinal fibrosis
- Infections – TB, syphilis
Pathophysiology
- The SVC is the major drainage vessels for venous blood from the head, neck, upper extremities and upper thorax
- SVC obstruction leads to formation of collateral veins to restore venous return to the heart
- The collaterals formed depend on the site of obstruction
- Pre-azygous obstruction – right superior intercostal veins drain into the azygous vein
- Azygous obstruction – connection between the SVC and IVC is formed via minor communicating channels
- SVC → internal mammary veins → superior and inferior epigastric veins → iliac veins → IVC
- Post azygous – blood from the SVC is distributed to the azygous and hemiazygous veins and then into the IVC
Clinical features
- Difficult breathing, headache, facial swelling
- Distended veins in neck and upper thorax
- Upper limb edema
- Pemberton sign – facial congestion and cyanosis when patient elevates both arms until forearms touch the sides of the face
Investigations
- Chest X-ray
- CT – imaging modality of choice
- Shows location and severity of SVC obstruction, mediastinal mass, collateral vessels, associated lung mass
Treatment
- Respiratory support
- Steroids – to decrease inflammatory response to tumour invasion (especially in lymphoma)
- Diuretics (furosemide) – relieves symptoms by decreasing venous return to the heart
- Endovascular stenting
- Treat the primary tumour/disease causing the obstruction
- Anticoagulants