Thymectomy Has Long-Term Benefits for Patients With MG

Gil Wolfe, MD.

Gil I. Wolfe, MD

Published February 15, 2019 This content is archived.

story based on news release by ellen goldbaum

Research by Gil I. Wolfe, MD, UB Distinguished Professor and Irvin and Rosemary Smith Chair of the Department of Neurology, shows that surgery to remove the thymus gland in patients with myasthenia gravis (MG) provides significant clinical benefits for as long as five years after the procedure.

“We do hope that the new findings help reverse the apparent reluctance to do thymectomy and that the proportion of patients with MG who undergo thymectomy will increase. ”
UB Distinguished Professor and Irvin and Rosemary Smith Chair of the Department of Neurology
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Patients Studied After Thymus Gland Removal

Study results were shown in a paper published Jan. 25 in The Lancet Neurology.

The study followed 68 patients for up to five years after undergoing thymectomy, the surgical removal of the thymus gland. The benefits they exhibited included improved disease outcomes, fewer immunosuppressive medications and fewer hospitalizations to address disease exacerbations. These benefits reduce health care costs.

The paper describes the results of an extension study of a subset of MG patients who were involved in MGTX, an international trial published previously that definitively confirmed the benefit of thymectomy even in MG patients without a chest tumor.

Number of Americans With MG Increasing

As many as 60,000 Americans have been diagnosed with MG — a rare autoimmune disease affecting neuromuscular function — and its incidence is increasing, a result of improved diagnostic techniques and an aging population. Symptoms of MG may include droopy eyelids, blurred or double vision, muscle weakness and difficulty speaking, swallowing and breathing.

“Our current findings reinforce the benefit of thymectomy seen in that original study, dispelling doubts about the procedure’s benefits and how long those benefits last,” says Wolfe, lead author of the current study that was conducted by an international team of researchers.

“We do hope that the new findings help reverse the apparent reluctance to do thymectomy and that the proportion of patients with MG who undergo thymectomy will increase," adds Wolfe.

Wolfe Also Led Groundbreaking MGTX Trial

Wolfe was clinical chair and lead author for the main MGTX trial, which was reported in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2016, one of the longest and largest clinical trials in the history of MG.

That trial, which followed patients for three years, was the first to definitively confirm the benefits of surgically removing the thymus early in the course of the disease. Patients who had the surgery were compared to those who hadn’t in terms of disease status and how much of the corticosteroid prednisone they needed. Patients who had undergone thymectomy needed about one-third less prednisone to control their disease and also had improved disease outcomes.

The researchers conducted the current study to determine for how long after surgery that benefit could be sustained.

“In prior retrospective studies, there was skepticism that the impact of thymectomy would persist beyond three to four years,” Wolfe says. “The assumption was that after that, the rates of improvement would be identical between patients who had had a thymectomy and those who had not.”

Quantitative MG Score Used to Evaluate Data

The new results — based on patients’ clinical status, medication requirements and adverse events — proved that assumption incorrect. The researchers found that the benefit from thymectomy continues to be seen up to five years after the procedure with improvement continuing to exceed that seen with medical therapy alone.

Patients who had the surgery and continued to take prednisone were able to take significantly lower doses of the steroid than patients who didn’t have the surgery.

The data were evaluated using commonly accepted outcomes for the disease, such as the Quantitative MG Score (QMG) and the proportion of patients with no functional limitations from the disease other than some muscle weakness, known as minimal manifestation status. Significantly more patients who had thymectomy were able to achieve this minimal manifestation status than those who hadn’t.

“When you look at minimal manifestation rates in patients who underwent thymectomy, they are pretty much the highest reported for any population of MG patients after five to seven years of focused management,” Wolfe says.

Economic Benefits as Well as Clinical

Wolfe says that another important result of the clinical benefits seen in patients undergoing thymectomy is the resulting economic benefit.

“We have evidence at both three and five years after surgery that the need for hospitalizations — such as intensive care admissions to treat MG exacerbations — is reduced by some two-thirds compared to medical therapy alone,” Wolfe says.

Nicholas J. Silvestri, MD, clinical associate professor of neurology and adult neurology residency program director, is one of the paper’s co-authors.

The research was supported by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Support in part was also provided by the NIH’s Clinical and Translational Science Awards Program grants to multiple institutions including UB, the University of Alabama at Birmingham, the University of Kansas Heartland Institute for Clinical and Translational Research, the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio and the National Center for Research Resources. The Muscular Dystrophy Foundation and Myasthenia Gravis Foundation of America provided support for initial planning of the MGTX trial.