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The correlation of morphological features of chest computed tomographic scans with clinical characteristics of thymoma.

OBJECTIVES: Chest computed tomography (CT) scanning has been widely utilized in thymoma identification and staging as well as in follow-up monitoring for recurrence. However, the relationship between some CT imaging features and pathological types, clinical stage, completeness of resection, or prognosis in thymoma has not been well explored.

METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed preoperative CT imaging for 238 thymoma patients, who had undergone thymectomy from October 2007 to December 2011. All CT parameters were assessed in each case based on clinical and pathological data. Survival analysis was performed by using the Kaplan-Meier and log-rank tests.

RESULTS: Tumour contours (P = 0.008), homogeneity (P = 0.009), degree of enhancement (P = 0.013), fat plane obliteration with adjacent structures (P < 0.001), the presence of mediastinal lymphadenopathy (P = 0.010), irregular infiltration into the lung (P = 0.012) and tumour shape (P = 0.007) were associated with the World Health Organization (WHO) histological classification. Lobulated or irregular tumour contours (P < 0.001), presence of calcifications (P = 0.002), infiltration of surrounding fat (P < 0.001), irregular infiltration into the lung (P < 0.001), irregular infiltration into vascular (P < 0.001), more abutment of vessels (P < 0.001) and pulmonary changes adjacent to the tumour (P < 0.001) were associated with the more advanced Masaoka-Koga clinical stage. Tumour contours (P < 0.001), infiltration of surrounding fat (P = 0.008), irregular infiltration into the lung (P < 0.001) and degree of abutment of vessel circumference (P = 0.001) were associated with completeness of resection. With multivariate analysis, no CT image features could reliably predict on the overall or disease-free survival rate.

CONCLUSIONS: CT imaging does have some features, which are significantly correlated with the WHO classification, the Masaoka-Koga clinical staging and the completeness of resection, although it has no definite role to evaluate preoperatively the survival rate of thymoma patients.

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