Abstract

BackgroundThymic atypical carcinoid has high recurrence and metastasis rates due to frequent lymph node metastases. The aim of the study is to report a case of atypical thymic carcinoid mimicking a paraganglioma and to further explain the benefits of using median sternotomy (MS) approach even in thymic epithelial tumours (TETs) sized less than 5 cm. Case presentationThe patient was a 59-year-old asymptomatic man. During a medical check-up, positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) showed a 4.5 cm-diameter thymus with remarkable uptake. Thoracic surgery was performed to completely remove the tumour with lymph node dissection using MS because of possible malignancy. Although MS is accepted as the standard approach for TETs, minimally invasive thoracotomy (MIT) has emerged over recent decades. Maintaining surgical safety is priority; MIT is generally selected in <5-cm-diameter tumours. Here, we considered that the tumour could be resected using MIT. However, because PET/CT showed marked uptake, we selected the MS approach. Thus, MS can be applied even for small-sized TETs. ConclusionThymic atypical carcinoid should be considered when PET/CT shows high-uptake tumours in the anterior mediastinum. Clinicians should consider using the MS approach, even if the tumour is <5 cm.

Highlights

  • For thymic epithelial tumour (TET) resection, minimally invasive thoracotomy (MIT) has been proposed as an alternative to conventional open thoracotomy (OT) via median sternotomy (MS) [1]

  • To resect TETs, MIT or OT is selected based on tumour size reference that guarantees an oncological safe tumour resection

  • Devoid of necrotic areas, mitotic rate was within 2–10 per 10 high-power fields (HPFs), the definitive diagnosis was atypical carcinoid of the thymus according to WHO classification of thymic neuroendocrine tumours [2]

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Summary

BACKGROUND

Thymic atypical carcinoid has high recurrence and metastasis rates due to frequent lymph node metastases. The aim of the study is to report a case of atypical thymic carcinoid mimicking a paraganglioma and to further explain the benefits of using median sternotomy (MS) approach even in thymic epithelial tumours (TETs) sized less than 5 cm. During a medical check-up, positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) showed a 4.5 cm-diameter thymus with remarkable uptake. Maintaining surgical safety is priority; MIT is generally selected in

Introduction
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