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Thymus Cancer Treatment in Germany - Best Hospitals, Doctors, Prices - Booking Health

Treatment of Thymus Cancer in Germany

Thymus cancer Treatment in Germany | Information about hospitals and doctors | Rankings | Clinics | Prices | Send request to the hospital

Best hospitals and doctors for thymus cancer treatment in Germany

Leading hospitals

Cost for treatment

Diagnosis of thymus cancer
1814
Excision of thymus cancer
15698.09
General therapeutic rehabilitation
0.00
University Hospital Muenster
Germany, Muenster
University Hospital Muenster
Overall rating9.8 / 10
According to the Focus magazine, the University Hospital Muenster ranks among the top German hospitals! The hospital belongs to the most prestigious medical institutions in Germany. The hospital is distinguished by a high professionalism of its doctors, state-of-the-art technological equipment and the availability of the most ad
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University Hospital Essen
Germany, Essen
University Hospital Essen
Overall rating9.6 / 10
According to the authoritative Focus magazine the University Hospital Essen ranks among the top German hospitals! With 27 specialized departments and 24 institutes, the hospital in Germany is a maximum care medical facility. The hospital has 1,300 beds for inpatient treatment. A highly qualified medical team of more than 6,000 e
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University Hospital Giessen UKGM
Germany, Giessen
University Hospital Giessen UKGM
Overall rating9.5 / 10
The University Hospital Giessen UKGM positions itself as an ultramodern medical facility with outstanding quality of medical care. The hospital presents almost all areas of medicine, ranging from ophthalmology to traumatology and dentistry. The priorities of the hospital’s activities include surgery, neurosurgery, oncology
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University Hospital Saarland Homburg
Germany, Homburg
University Hospital Saarland Homburg
Overall rating9.8 / 10
The University Hospital Saarland Homburg is the largest hospital in the city of Homburg and the most important medical facility in the region. The hospital, which currently has 30 specialized departments and 20 institutes, was founded in 1947 and operates on the basis of Saarland University. The hospital plays a leading role in
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HELIOS University Hospital Wuppertal
Germany, Wuppertal
HELIOS University Hospital Wuppertal
Overall rating9.8 / 10
According to the prestigious Focus magazine, the HELIOS University Hospital Wuppertal ranks among the top medical facilities in Germany! The hospital rightfully enjoys the status of the maximum care medical facility and provides its high-quality services in all modern fields of medicine. The hospital operates on the basis of the
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University Hospital Oldenburg
Germany, Oldenburg
University Hospital Oldenburg
Overall rating10 / 10
The University Hospital Oldenburg is a multidisciplinary medical complex offering top-notch services of the European standard. The hospital has 20 specialized departments, 15 highly specialized centers, and more than 10 institutes. The hospital provides services in almost all areas of modern medicine: general and abdominal surge
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HELIOS Clinic Krefeld
Germany, Krefeld
HELIOS Clinic Krefeld
Overall rating9.7 / 10
Founded in 2014, the HELIOS Clinic Krefeld is one of the most modern medical facilities in Germany today. A team of highly qualified specialists, innovative medical equipment and comfortable accommodation conditions – the clinic has everything to make the treatment run smoothly and efficiently. Having crossed the threshold
Hospital St. Elisabeth Grevenbroich
Germany, Grevenbroich
Hospital St. Elisabeth Grevenbroich
Overall rating10 / 10
The Hospital St. Elisabeth Grevenbroich provides quality medical services in various medical fields. The special focus is on gastroenterology, oncology, general, abdominal and vascular surgery, gynecology, orthopedics and cardiology. As an academic facility, the hospital maintains close contacts with the University Hospital RWTH
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Hospital Bogenhausen Munich
Germany, Munich
Hospital Bogenhausen Munich
Overall rating7.8 / 10
According to the reputable Focus magazine, the Hospital Bogenhausen Munich ranks among the ten best medical centers in Bavaria and among the top 50 medical facilities in Germany! The medical facility is the Academic Hospital of Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. The modern hospital with the highest level of services annuall
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Hospital Cologne-Merheim
Germany, Cologne
Hospital Cologne-Merheim
Overall rating8.9 / 10
According to the reputable Focus magazine, the Hospital Cologne-Merheim ranks among the top German medical centers! The health facility is an academic hospital of Witten/Herdecke University, which gives patients access to the very latest developments in European medicine. The Hospital Cologne-Merheim positions itself as a maximu
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Asklepios Hospital Barmbek Hamburg
Germany, Hamburg
Asklepios Hospital Barmbek Hamburg
Overall rating9.5 / 10
The Asklepios Hospital Barmbek Hamburg is an academic hospital of the University of Hamburg. The hospital was opened in 2005, and today it is one of the best and most modern medical centers in Europe. The priority areas of specialization of the medical facility are emergency medical care and comprehensive treatment of cancer, ur
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Hospital Schwabing Munich
Germany, Munich
Hospital Schwabing Munich
Overall rating8.5 / 10
The Hospital Schwabing Munich is one of the oldest medical facilities in the Schwabing region with a history of over 100 years. The hospital is proud of the excellent state-of-the-art equipment, modern infrastructure, highly professional medical personnel and location in a picturesque park area. The medical complex is the academ
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Evangelical Lung Hospital Berlin
Germany, Berlin
Evangelical Lung Hospital Berlin
Overall rating9 / 10
The Evangelical Lung Hospital Berlin ranks among 10 largest highly specialized medical facilities in Germany for the treatment of lung diseases of varying severity. The medical complex is a well-known specialized hospital for the treatment of acute and chronic diseases of the lungs and other thoracic organs. The hospital was fou
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Hannover Medical School (MHH)
Germany, Hannover
Hannover Medical School (MHH)
Overall rating9.8 / 10
The Hannover Medical School has the status of a leading German medical facility. The advanced medical technologies, highly qualified specialists, as well as productive research activities form a solid basis for top-class medical service of the world standard. The hospital is proud of its outstanding achievements in the treatment
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Sana Hospital Duisburg
Germany, Duisburg
Sana Hospital Duisburg
Overall rating9.2 / 10
The Sana Hospital Duisburg is a maximum care medical center with 678 beds and 17 specialized departments. With the very latest innovations and high quality patient care, the clinic works for the benefit of a person and their health. The hospital ranks among the leading clinics in the region. In 2013, the hospital
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Park-Clinic Weissensee Berlin
Germany, Berlin
Park-Clinic Weissensee Berlin
Overall rating9 / 10
The Park-Clinic Weissensee Berlin is a progressive medical facility with the highest standards of medical care. The medical facility is an academic hospital of the Charite University Hospital Berlin, thanks to which the specialists have access to all medical innovations. The clinic was opened on April 1, 1997, on the former Weis
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| from Booking Health GmbH

Thymus cancer is a rare neoplasm that develops in the mediastinum. In Germany, it is treated with surgical interventions: not only open but also minimally invasive ones. After surgery, most patients receive radiation therapy. In the advanced stages of cancer, chemotherapy is used, and sometimes targeted therapy and immunotherapy can also be used.

Content

  1. What is thymus cancer
  2. Thymus cancer symptoms
  3. Diagnostics
  4. Principles of treatment
  5. Surgical treatment
  6. Radiation therapy
  7. Chemotherapy
  8. Targeted therapy and immunotherapy
  9. Why is it worth undergoing thymus cancer treatment in Germany

What is thymus cancer

 

Thymic tumors are epithelial neoplasms that belong to one of three types. 

  • thymoma; 
  • thymus cancer;
  • neuroendocrine tumor of the thymus gland.

These are rare tumors that account for up to 0.5% of all cancers.

There are different types of thymoma: benign, intermediate, and malignant tumors. Malignant neoplasms are referred to as thymus cancer. This is a severe oncological disease with a five-year patient survival rate of about 55%. However, if detected at stage 1, this figure is 90%, and at stage 2, the survival rate reaches 70%.

Thymoma can develop at any age, and thymic carcinoma occurs predominantly in people over 70. The causes of malignant neoplasms of the thymus are unknown. Risk factors have not been established.

Thymus cancer symptoms

 

The main symptoms of the disease are associated with tumor growth and compression of the surrounding organs:

  • dyspnea;
  • cough;
  • bloody sputum;
  • hemoptysis; 
  • chest pain;
  • dysphagia (difficulty swallowing); 
  • loss of appetite; 
  • weight loss. 

Since the thymus gland is located next to the superior vena cava, with the growth of the tumor, its compression is possible. In this case, additional symptoms may develop:

  • facial swelling;
  • bulging neck veins;
  • bluish color to the neck and upper chest; 
  • headache; 
  • dizziness. 

With thymoma, half of the patients develop myasthenia gravis. This is an autoimmune inflammation that blocks neuromuscular transmission. Patients easily get tired, suffer from muscle weakness, have difficulty climbing stairs, and cannot walk long distances. These patients often have droopy eyelids, double vision, difficulty swallowing, and may also experience shortness of breath due to respiratory muscle weakness.

Diagnostics

 

The diagnostics involve the use of instrumental methods. Some patients undergo a tumor biopsy.

Chest X-ray is often the first examination that a doctor prescribes to patients complaining of pain, shortness of breath, dysphagia, and other symptoms. The doctor can see a mediastinal tumor on the X-ray image. In addition, small growths are sometimes detected incidentally when the X-ray scan is taken for another disease (for example, pneumonia).

Computed tomography is a more accurate method of examining chest organs. It allows doctors to assess the size, shape of the tumor, spread to the adjacent tissues, and the presence of metastases in the regional lymph nodes. Whenever required, a CT-guided biopsy is performed.

A biopsy is not required for all patients. It is not performed if the doctor is sure that the mediastinal tumor is not lymphoma and cancer treatment is planned to begin with surgery. Nonetheless, a biopsy is required in some cases to rule out lymphoma and is also performed for patients for whom chemotherapy is the first treatment. The drug treatment scheme depends on the histological type and grade of cancer.

MRI is infrequently used for thymic carcinoma. It is an alternative to CT scanning for people whom this test is contraindicated. But MRI is a less accurate method of chest scanning.

PET is a radionuclide test to detect distant metastases if any. This diagnostic test allows scanning the entire body and identifying metastatic foci in the lymph nodes and distant organs. This diagnostic test is required in cases where the doctor suspects the presence of distant metastases but does not know where they developed.

Principles of treatment

 

The patients with stage 1 are candidates for surgery. The treatment for patients with stage 2 may be different: surgery or radiation therapy. The issue is resolved individually.

Histological verification of the tumor before surgery is not mandatory, so the biopsy is not performed. The neoplasm is removed, and only after that, the surgical material is examined in the laboratory.

If there is suspicion that the formation found in the mediastinum may not be thymus cancer but lymphoma, then a biopsy is performed. Lymphoma is treated with chemotherapy, but not surgery, so the doctor needs to know what kind of tumor they are dealing with before starting treatment.

Whether the patient needs treatment after surgery depends on: 

  • type of thymus cancer; 
  • stages; 
  • grade;
  • the radicalness of the operation performed (whether the doctor managed to remove cancer completely). 

An unequivocal indication for radiation therapy to treat thymus carcinoma is incomplete resection. The residual tumor is destroyed by radiation. The therapy is carried out no later than three months after surgery.

In some patients, the tumor is recognised as unresectable at the time of detection of thymus cancer. In this case, it can be converted to a resectable state and then removed. In stage 3, the treatment usually begins with chemotherapy. If the neoplasm decreases in size, the operation is performed. The next step is radiation therapy.

10-15% of patients after the surgical treatment of thymus cancer develop relapses. In such situations, the second operation is under consideration.

In metastatic thymus cancer (stage 4), the main treatment method is chemotherapy. Not all patients get good results. In case of response to therapy, the tumor may shrink. A doctor can remove it completely along with metastases. Therefore, after successful chemotherapy for cancer of any stage, the issue of surgical treatment and adjuvant radiation therapy is discussed.

After the initial treatment, patients are monitored. They are periodically examined to timely detect cancer recurrence. The diagnostic examination is carried out once in six months in the first two years, then one time per year. The follow-up period for the thymus gland cancer is five years. For thymoma, it is ten years.

Surgical treatment

 

The goal of radical surgery is to remove the entire tumor mass and the thymus gland. The resection of the adjacent structures may be required: pericardium, pleura, lung, phrenic nerve, and great vessels. During the removal of the thymus gland, pleural revision is performed. The doctors always remove the cellular tissue surrounding the thymus gland with lymph nodes.

If the doctor has doubts that cancer has been completely removed, he marks the resection margins with surgical clips. They are necessary for subsequent radiation therapy.

There are two types of surgery to remove  thymus cancer: 

  • median sternotomy is a classic surgical intervention through a large incision in the center of the chest;
  • Thoracoscopy is a minimally invasive intervention through short incisions, with long thin instruments, under the control of a video camera.

The minimally invasive version of the operation is not considered the standard treatment method since the intervention is technically complex. It is performed only in specialized centers. In Germany, such operations for thymus carcinoma are performed on patients with stage 1 or 2 diseases.

Radiation therapy

 

Radiation therapy for cancer can be used in the following cases: 

  • after surgery to remove thymus cancer – at any stage;
  • after surgery to remove thymoma of any stage, except for the first one;
  • to curb the growth of the inoperable tumor;
  • at the advanced stage, with a palliative purpose (to relieve symptoms: pain, shortness of breath, bleeding, dysphagia). 

Hospitals in Germany use advanced radiation therapy options: IMRT and VMAT, which can reduce radiation exposure to critical organs. The scope of irradiation includes the area of the primary tumor, anterior, superior, and middle mediastinum. Lymph nodes and pleura are not irradiated for prophylactic purposes. Nonetheless, they can be included in the radiation zone with the signs of metastasis detected.

Vital organs surround the thymus gland. It is important to direct the radiation to the tumor very precisely to avoid complications. Therefore, doctors use 3D or 4D respiratory-gated planning. The dose of radiation and the number of fractions are selected individually, depending on the presence and volume of the residual tumor.

Chemotherapy

 

Chemotherapy for thymus cancer can be conducted in the following cases: 

  • after surgery to reduce the risk of recurrence;
  • before surgery to shrink the tumor and destroy metastases;
  • with the presence of medical contraindications to surgery – alone or in combination with radiation therapy;
  • in the advanced stages of cancer.

For thymoma chemotherapy, doctors use CAP, ADOC, and EP regimens. In the case of thymus cancer, TC and GEM-CAP schemes are used, and monotherapy with one drug is possible. 4 to 6 cycles are usually required. If chemotherapy is started before surgery, patients receive 2-4 cycles. The remaining cycles of chemotherapy are completed after cancer removal.

In the advanced stages of cancer, chemotherapy is used as the main treatment method. It does not cure the disease but relieves symptoms and increases the life expectancy of patients. Approximately one-third of patients respond to first-line chemotherapy, and one in five respond to second-line chemotherapy. If, after successful first-line therapy, a relapse occurs more than six months later, this regimen is likely to work again. But if the relapse occurs earlier, or the patient does not respond to first-line chemotherapy, doctors switch to the second-line regimen.

Hospitals in Germany conduct not only systemic but also topical chemotherapy. It is not yet part of the standard treatments but is already used in some specialized hospitals. Hyperthermic intrathoracic chemotherapy (HITHOC) is used for advanced cancer. It is performed immediately after tumor removal surgery. Doctors wash the chest cavity with a heated solution of chemotherapy drugs to kill any remaining cancer cells and reduce the risk of cancer recurrence.

Targeted therapy and immunotherapy

 

Targeted therapy and immunotherapy are rarely used. In 10% of cases, thymus carcinoma has a mutation in the c-KIT gene. Such patients can be treated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Tumors disappear or decrease in 26% of cases, stabilize in 41% of patients.

Immunotherapy with checkpoint inhibitors is also used as the second-line therapy for thymus cancer. The objective response rate (disappearance or reduction of tumors by more than 30%) is 22.5%. 15% of treated patients develop autoimmune complications.

For patients with thymoma, mTOR inhibitors may be prescribed as well. Objective response is achieved only in 11% of cases, but stabilization of the oncological process is ensured in 88% of patients. With this tumor, analogues of the hormone somatostatin can also be used.

Why is it worth undergoing thymus cancer treatment in Germany

 

Thymus cancer is a rare type of cancer. But Germany offers specialized centers with extensive experience in treating such patients. You can get medical care in one of the hospitals specializing in mediastinal tumors. There are several reasons for you to undergo cancer treatment in Germany:

  • minimally invasive thoracoscopic surgery to remove stage 1-2 cancer (less traumatic compared to a large incision in the center of the sternum);
  • experienced surgeons, in most cases, remove cancer completely, which ensures a low risk of recurrence and a smaller volume of postoperative radiation therapy;
  • resectable thymus tumors are cured with a probability of up to 90%;
  • successful surgical treatment for cancer, even at stages 3-4, is possible if the patient responds to chemotherapy;
  • radical surgical operations are performed even for recurrent tumors;
  • for postoperative irradiation, doctors use new types of radiation therapy, which can reduce the risk of side effects from the organs surrounding the thymus (including the heart, lungs);
  • in addition to chemotherapy, drug treatment for advanced stages of cancer is carried out using targeted therapy and immunotherapy.

To undergo treatment for thymus cancer in a hospital in Germany, you are welcome to use the Booking Health service. On our website, you can get up-to-date and accurate information about the cost of treatment in Germany, compare prices in different German hospitals and book a medical care program at a favorable price. The treatment will be easier and faster for you, and the cost of treatment in Germany will be lower.

Please leave your request on the website of the Booking Health medical tourism facilitator. Our employee will contact you, consult, and answer all your questions. We will take care of the organization of your trip abroad. We will provide the following benefits for you:

  • We will select the German hospital whose doctors specialize in thymus cancer treatment and achieve the best results.
  • We will help you overcome the language barrier and communicate with the doctor from the German hospital.
  • The waiting period for medical diagnosis and treatment for you will be reduced, and you will receive medical care on the most suitable dates.
  • We will reduce the price. The cost of treatment in Germany will be lower than usual due to eliminating overpricing and additional coefficients for foreign patients.
  • Our specialists will solve any organizational issues: paperwork, transfer from the airport to the German hospital and back, hotel booking, and interpreting services.
  • We will prepare your documents and translate them into English or German. You will not have to undergo the previously performed diagnostic procedures.
  • We will keep in touch with the German hospital after the completion of treatment.
  • We will arrange additional medical examinations and treatment if required.
  • We will buy medicines in another country and forward them to your native country.

While the best specialists in the world take care of your health, the Booking Health staff will help reduce the cost of treatment in Germany and take care of all the travel arrangements.

 

Authors:

The article was edited by medical experts, board certified doctors Dr. Nadezhda Ivanisova and Dr. Sergey Pashchenko. For the treatment of the conditions referred to in the article, you must consult a doctor; the information in the article is not intended for self-medication!

 

Sources:

National Cancer Institute

Cancer Support Community

European Society for Medical Oncology