Combined effect of thymectomy on myasthenia gravis in patients with concomitant auto-immune diseases: a 22-year single-center experience

AbstractMyasthenia gravis (MG) is an autoimmune disease (AD), and patients with MG often have other types of ADs. We analyzed the prognosis of patients with MG complicated by AD after thymectomy. A retrospective analysis was performed for patients with MG complicated by ADs treated surgically in our center over the past 22  years, and their general condition and follow-up data were collected and analyzed. 33 patients were included totally. 28 patients displayed improvement or even complete recovery of MG, and 23 of 36 ADs revealed improvement or even complete recovery. The prognosis of MG is significantly correlated with the duration of postoperative follow-up time (p = 0.028), and in patients with thymoma, the larger the tumor diameter, the better the prognosis of MG (p = 0.026). Thymic hyperplasia patients were predominantly female (p = 0.049) and young (p <  0.001). The most common concomitant AD in this study was a thyroid-associated AD, which was associated with thymic hyperplasia (p <  0.001), Osserman type I MG (p <  0.001), and young age (p <  0.001). Thymectomy had a good therapeutic effect on MG complicated by AD, and there was a close correlation between surgery, thymus, MG, and ADs.
Source: Updates in Surgery - Category: Surgery Source Type: research