# A Systematic Review of Heated Intrathoracic Chemotherapy for Thymic Epithelial Tumors and the First Case Report of a Robotic Approach: Could a Minimally Invasive Approach Offer a New Paradigm of Care?

**Authors:** Russell Seth Martins, Elizabeth Christophel, Kostantinos Poulikidis, Syed Shahzad Razi, M. Jawad Latif, Jeffrey Luo, Faiz Y. Bhora

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm14124094 · 2025-06-10

## TL;DR

This paper reviews heated intrathoracic chemotherapy for thymic tumors and reports the first robotic approach, suggesting it could improve treatment.

## Contribution

The first case report of a robotic approach to HITHOC for thymic epithelial tumors.

## Key findings

- HITHOC for thymic tumors shows high survival rates up to 15 years.
- Air leaks were the most common complication observed.
- Robotic HITHOC is feasible and offers potential benefits over open surgery.

## Abstract

Background/Objectives: Thymic epithelial tumors with pleural metastasis require a multimodal treatment approach with the use of novel modalities such as hyperthermic intrathoracic chemotherapy (HITHOC). This systematic review and case report aims to summarize the existing evidence regarding HITHOC for these tumors and presents the first case of a robotic approach to HITHOC. Methods: A search in November 2023 yielded a total of 17 articles, including 281 patients who met the eligibility criteria (i.e., underwent HITHOC for treatment of a thymic epithelial tumor). Results: Variations existed among HITHOC regimens and surgical approaches. The most common complications observed were air leaks. Overall survival ranged 92–95% at 1 year, 83–91.7% at 3 years, 66.7–92% at 5 years, 40–83.3% at 10 years, and 27.8–58.2% at 15 years. Conclusions: While HITHOC for thymic epithelial tumors with pleural dissemination has been shown to yield successful outcomes in the literature, this procedure has historically been performed almost exclusively via an open thoracotomy. The robotic approach to HITHOC is feasible and affords several important benefits.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** pleural metastasis (MESH:D009362), tumors (MESH:D009369), air leaks (MESH:D004618), Thymic Epithelial Tumors (MESH:C536905)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12194147/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12194147