Case Reports in Pulmonology (Jan 2020)

Invasive Thymoma with Right Upper Lobe Endobronchial Lesion and Autoimmune Enteropathy

  • Saumil Datar,
  • Henriette De La Garza,
  • Aditya Srinivasan,
  • Gloria Iliescu,
  • Neda Kalhor,
  • Horiana Grosu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2020/6396915
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2020

Abstract

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Thymomas are slow-growing neoplasia arising from the epithelial cells of the thymus that usually present with respiratory symptoms, superior vena cava syndrome, or parathymic syndromes. Approximately 30% of thymomas develop myasthenia gravis. An additional 5% of patients with thymomas have other systemic syndromes, including rheumatoid arthritis, thyroiditis, red cell aplasia, systemic lupus erythematosus, and Cushing syndrome. Rarely, patients can present with diarrhea due to thymoma-associated autoimmune gastrointestinal pathologies that include Good syndrome (acquired hypogammaglobulinemia), thymoma- associated multiorgan autoimmunity, and autoimmune enteropathy. We present an uncommon and interesting case of an invasive metastatic thymoma with right upper lobe endobronchial lesion and autoimmune enteropathy in a 27-year-old female. The novelty of this case lay in the findings of extensive metastatic thymoma with right upper lobe endobronchial disease and autoimmune diarrhea.