1. Myasthenia gravis: a long term follow-up study of Swedish patients with specific reference to thymic histology
- Author
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Georg Matell, Ann-Kari Lefvert, Ritva Pirskanen-Matell, and Natalie Tsinzerling
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Neuromuscular transmission ,Uterine Cervical Neoplasms ,Comorbidity ,Gastroenterology ,Receptors, Cholinergic ,Prospective Studies ,Age of Onset ,Aged, 80 and over ,Incidence ,Middle Aged ,Hyperplasia ,Thymectomy ,Causality ,Survival Rate ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Treatment Outcome ,Population Surveillance ,Female ,Carcinoma in Situ ,Adult ,Paper ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Thymoma ,Neuromuscular disease ,Thymus Gland ,Endocrine System Diseases ,Antibodies ,Internal medicine ,Myasthenia Gravis ,medicine ,Humans ,Lymphatic Diseases ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Immunosuppression Therapy ,Sweden ,business.industry ,Histology ,Thymus Neoplasms ,medicine.disease ,Myasthenia gravis ,Surgery ,Concomitant ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background: Myasthenia gravis (MG) is an autoimmune disorder of neuromuscular transmission. The majority of patients show abnormal thymic histology. Setting: The study was performed at the Myasthenia Gravis Centre, Karolinska University Hospital, and at the Immunological Research Laboratory, Centre for Molecular Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden. Patients and methods: Information was collected retrospectively from 1956 and prospectively from 1975 on clinical data, concomitant diseases, concentration of serum acetylcholine receptor antibodies (AChR-abs), immunosuppressive treatment (IS) and response to it, in 537 patients of whom 326 were thymectomised. Follow-up time was 1.5–50 years. Results: Age at onset of MG increased from a median age of 24 years before 1975 to a median age of 61 years after 2000. Thymoma was found in 65, hyperplasia (HPL) in 185 and a normal thymus in 76 patients. The trans-sternal surgical approach for thymectomy was used in 255 patients (78%). In five patients with thymoma, MG appeared after thymectomy. Of 537 patients, 466 (87%) had circulating AChR-abs. IS was given to 300 (56%) patients, mostly those with thymoma (85%). In total, 441 patients (82%) showed an improvement. One-third of patients with HPL, a quarter of those with thymoma, one-fifth of those with a normal thymus and one-seventh of those not operated on went into remission. Conclusion: The prognosis for the majority of patients with MG is favourable, irrespective of thymic histology. The cause may be the use of immunomodulating therapy.
- Published
- 2007