Abstract
Anterior mediastinal lesions can be a source of uncertainty on imaging, and thymic cysts present a unique diagnostic challenge. Differentiation of non-simple fluid-containing benign simple thymic cysts from small thymic neoplasms is challenging with computed tomography (CT) alone. Additionally, the malignant potential of simple thymic cysts is unclear and guidelines for imaging surveillance are not established. All imaging studies containing the phrase "thymic cyst" were identified at our institution between October 2012 and October 2022. Studies were excluded if the main radiological diagnosis was anything other than a thymic cyst. This yielded 107 individual patient records, of which 11 did not meet inclusion criteria, leaving 96 unique patients. While most cysts evaluated remained stable throughout the period of surveillance (53%; n=51), some increased in size (13%), some decreased in size (6%), and some fluctuated (5%). Some cysts changed in internal attenuation/signal characteristics in keeping with interval haemorrhage (6%). 34% of cysts (n=31) demonstrate internal average attenuation values of more than 20HU. Of the entire cohort of patients studied over 10 years, none developed malignancy within the period of surveillance. Unilocular thymic cysts are most often discovered incidentally but their imaging characteristics can be difficult to interpret on CT, as they are commonly hyperdense and may change in size and internal content. Once simple thymic cysts are adequately characterised with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) then extended radiological surveillance may not be required.
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