Thymoma and paraneoplastic myasthenia gravis

  • A. Marx*
  • , N. Willcox
  • , M. I. Leite
  • , W. Y. Chuang
  • , B. Schalke
  • , W. Nix
  • , P. Strbel
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

191 Scopus citations

Abstract

Paraneoplastic autoimmune diseases associate occasionally with small cell lung cancers and gynecologic tumors. However, myasthenia gravis (MG) occurs in at least 30% of all patients with thymomas (usually present at MG diagnosis). These epithelial neoplasms almost always have numerous admixed maturing polyclonal T cells (thymocytes). This thymopoiesis - and export of mature CD4+T cellsparticularly - associates with MG, though there are rare/puzzling exceptions in apparently pure epithelial WHO type A thymomas. Other features potentially leading to inefficient self-tolerance induction include defective epithelial expression of the autoimmune regulator (AIRE) gene and/or of major histocompatibility complex class II molecules in thymomas, absence of myoid cells, failure to generate FOXP3+ regulatory T cells, and genetic polymorphisms affecting T-cell signaling. However, the strong focus on MG/neuromuscular targets remains unexplained and suggests some biased autoantigen expression, T-cell selection, or autoimmunization within thymomas. There must be further clues in the intriguing serological and cellular parallels in some patients with late-onset MG but without thymomasand in others with AIRE mutationsand in the contrasts with early-onset MG, as discussed here.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)413-427
Number of pages15
JournalAutoimmunity
Volume43
Issue number5-6
DOIs
StatePublished - 08 2010

Keywords

  • Autoimmunity
  • myasthenia gravis
  • thymoma

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